What Do Bruce Monroe Elementary School & the Takoma Educational Campus Have In Common?

Both schools have been considered under-enrolled, yet one was demolished and the other completely refurbished.  William Jordan, a member of the list serve Concerned for DCPS has some theories as to why.  I’ve reprinted them below because I think they are worthy of your consideration.

Posted on the Concerned For DCPS List Serve on January 5, 2012:

Takoma Educational Campus after the Rehabilitation

I would suggest anyone who has followed or participated in the “Bruce Monroe School” over the years to pick up the Wednesday, December 28, 2011 addition of Northwest_Current 12.28.11 .  On the front page is an article about the reopening of the Takoma Educational Campus one year after a fire closed the school.  The article is relevant to Bruce Monroe because the city and officials, including Councilmember Graham, etc. found a way to address the needs of Takoma doing the very things they told our community and Bruce Monroe stakeholders they could not do months prior to the Takoma fire.   It reveals the pattern of dishonesty and political disdain by then Chancellor Rhee and Councilmember Graham toward this community and the population of families and students served by Bruce Monroe.

Bruce Monroe Elementary after the Demolition

The article explains how the city initially planned to make $2 million in repairs but later decided to invest $25.5 million in a complete rehab.  Via a bait & switch, Councilmember Graham and Rhee mislead this community into believing that the DCPS capital budget could not be adjusted to do a complete rehab of Bruce Monroe either as part of the redevelopment of the old site or as rehab of Bruce Monroe at Park View as they promised in prior years.

As evidence of what was actually promised, the notes from community meetings in which the future of Bruce Monroe was discussed can be downloaded via the following links.:

Notes_from_Meeting_With_Graham_and_Rhee_4-6-10

Parents_Meet_With_Jim_Graham_March_16_2010

Notes_from_Meeting_With_Graham_and_Rhee_4-6-10

 

Bruce Monroe, Park View & Meyer were closed down as part of the 2008 DCPS Rhee closings supposedly because of low enrollment.  It should be noted that Takoma Enrollment was on par with Meyer.  However, Bruce Monroe was reconstituted and the students shipped to Park View the least hospitable of all 3 buildings. In fact Park View at the time could have easily been considered dangerous.  Despite this Bruce Monroe students were not relocated to the Meyer building which was in much better shape, they went to Park View.   In the meantime, Councilmember Graham placed a boxing program in Meyer Elementary, to which he had been funneling earmarks for years with no community or practical oversight.  Clearly, Ward 1 closings were not so much about education, but politics and real estate development.  Rhee closed schools with minimal responsibility and Councilmember Graham place his political concerns above those of DCPS students or the community at large.

In this case Councilmember Graham and then Chancellor Rhee engaged in operating at one of the lowest political and  ethical standards possible under the guise of school reform.  To politically punish and breakup the Bruce Monroe school family, they place a school primarily serving working class Latino and African American families in building (Park View) which at the time had become unfit when better alternatives were available.  The positive outcome for Takoma when placed in context makes clear the dishonest nature of reform under Rhee, the unethical cesspool that is Ward 1 politics and ultimately the nexus between pay-to-play politics, real estate development and school reform.

William Jordan

How School Closures Hurt Our Communities

River Terrace Students, courtesy DDOE

I just finished listening to the December 27 edition of the Latino Media Collective, a radio program that airs on WPFW every Wednesday night from 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM. This episode focuses on the city’s penchant for closing schools in neighborhoods that private developers have shown an interest in developing. River Terrace, a quiet, residential community along the Anacostia Waterfront, right across the river from long sought-after Kingman Island, is one such neighborhood. Despite loud and persistent objections from the residents, River Terrace Elementary School was the latest to make the school closure list.

Education advocate Alicia Rucker claims that you can predict when a school is going to be closed by the incremental withdrawal of attention and resources to the surrounding community by District government. She is concerned about her children’s school, Houston Elementary. River Terrace was at one time on the school modernization list, but with no explanation to the community, it was withdrawn. Houston Elementary has also been on the school modernization list, but because DCPS has become silent with regards to modernization plans, the school community speculates that Houston has been or shortly will be removed. One city official in the District’s Office of Facilities Planning has confirmed this, although no public announcement has yet been made. Will closure be next for Houston as well?

And then there’s the Illinois Facilities Fund Study. The Deputy Mayor for Education (De’Shawn Wright) hired the Illinois-based firm to evaluate the competing needs of charters and traditional public schools for DCPS space. Should we be concerned that the Illinois Facilities Fund is known for working with charter schools (often to the detriment of traditional public schools) or that the study was funded by the Walton Family Foundation (Wal-Mart)?  Because the funding is private, IFF was chosen without any competition or public input.

How School Closures Hurt Our Community by the Latino Media Collective

All of these issues and more are covered in the above audio podcast. The show was co-hosted by Oscar Fernandez and Daniel del Pielago. Education activist Alicia Rucker was their in-studio guest and Diana Onley-Campbell joined them on the phone. If you think school closings ended in DCPS when Michelle Rhee left, you’re wrong. If you think school closings are good for DC’s historically Black communities or for DCPS students, then this program should prove enlightening.

Bruce Monroe at Parkview: A Story of Promises Unfulfilled

Bruce Monroe at ParkviewIn 2010, during Michelle Rhee’s tenure as DCPS school chancellor, the District government promised the parents, students and staff of Bruce Monroe Elementary School as well as the surrounding community that if they tore the building down they would rebuild the school on the same spot.  Long story short, the building is down but the new one hasn’t been built.  All those Bruce Monroe stakeholders are still wondering what’s up?  After all, when you say you’re gonna do a thing, integrity demands that you make your best effort.

Despite the ethical challenges facing our elected officials, parents continue to attend and testify at public hearings regarding the school.  The latest hearing in which Bruce Monroe was mentioned was in March of 2011.   Although Grassroots Media Project radio producer Rachel Estabrook put this audio segment together way back then, I’m just now getting around to posting it.  (My apologies. )

Bruce Monroe Follow Up

To join the campaign to rebuild Bruce Monroe contact Daniel del Pielago at (202) 234-9119 ext. 104 or Daniel@empowerdc.org.

In the above audio segment, you will hear a number of parents testify about their continued frustrations over unfulfilled promises and problems with Parkview Elementary, the school their children are now attending.  One of those parents is Sequnely Gray, Empower DC’s childcare organizer.  She is all too familiar with the Bruce Monroe saga seeing as how three of her children attended Bruce Monroe before it was demolished.  I asked her to chronicle a brief history of the organizing efforts of the Parents and Friends of Bruce Monroe.  Her response, which I think is an inspiring example of community leadeship in the face of a city hall that , follows:

 

For the past ten years the friends, teachers, parents and staff of Bruce Monroe have fought continuously to insure that our children receive a quality education as well as a beautiful, safe and healthy environment for them to succeed in. In 2008, we were informed by the Washington Post that Bruce Monroe elementary school would be closed for good.

At that moment parents, staff and teachers rallied together with the help of Teaching for Change to advocate for our children’s school. We advocated for closed classrooms and new windows. The parents, staff and community members got together and reached out to some businesses in our community.   As a result of our efforts, we received a generous donation of $1 million dollars from Target to build a 21st century, state of the art library and the whole east side of the school remodeled, including new walls and new windows.

Several months later we meet with Ward 1 councilmember Jim Graham, Mayor Adrian Fenty, and newly appointed DC Public Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee. They each stated that we didn’t need to beg and plead for a new facility for our children because this is what they should have and the only way to get it was to relocate to Parkview Elementary School on Warder Street NW.  They promised that a new Bruce Monroe Elementary School would be built by the fall of 2011 under a public/private partnership. The parents were excited to find out that the school would not be closed.  We rallied once again, knocking on doors and passing out flyers to make sure the community knew that [even though the old Bruce Monroe would be demolished a new state-of-the-art Bruce Monroe was still going to be built and opened] was still going to be opened.

For the 2008/2009 school year, we relocated to Parkview Elementary on Warder Street NW.  The conditions of that building were very poor; poorer than they were at Bruce Monroe.  In the summer of 2009, the parents, community members and the staff formed a SIT team to work in partnership with DCPS to develop plans for the rebuild of Bruce Monroe. We meet 2 or 3 times but after that we heard nothing from the city officials.  We tried to contact and schedule meetings with Mayor Fenty and Michelle Rhee but we got no response.

While trying to figure out who to talk to next about the rebuild of the school, we decided that we needed help advocating for this property that had been stolen from us and to inform the community of what DC Government was doing behind our backs.  With the help of Ms. Dyana Forester, we were connected with Empower DC.

Empower DC held trainings and facilitated meetings with the parents, staff and community members to build leadership and to help us become better advocates for positive change in our community and a safe and healthy environment for our children. Empower DC helped parents prepare testimonies to testify before the city council and helped us schedule a meeting with our councilmember Jim Graham.

At several of those meeting, Mr. Graham was rude and disrespectful to his constituents.  He would make gestures as if he were tired of us asking him to support the rebuild of Bruce Monroe. Councilmember Graham has personally disrespected me–a constituent, A DCPS parent and a DC resident that voted for him. In one meeting, I stated that we were tired of being given the run-around and asked him if there was one person that we could work with on a continuing basis.  Councilmember Graham cut me off in the middle of my question and stated, “you can’t ask me that question.  You haven’t met your meeting quota yet because you work for Empower DC.”  (Incidentally, I was not a staff member of Empower DC at the time.)  Graham continued to be disrespectful.  He could never commit to supporting the rebuild of Bruce Monroe.  He kept interrupting the parents and staff that were trying to voice their opinions.  Graham never gave us a straight answer about who the contact person was, the budget or if we even had money in the budget for the rebuild of Bruce Monroe.

The rest of the parents, community members along with Dyana Forester and Empower DC expressed to Councilmember Graham that I was a long time parent at Bruce Monroe and that had I testified several times before him and the rest of the council members regarding the same issue we were meeting about now.

This was the second time Mr. Graham had disrespected me.  The previous time was at the unveiling of the mural dedicated to the remembrance of Bruce Monroe. The parents, community members and staff were not invited to have input in the creation of the mural nor where our children apart of creating the mural. Councilmember Graham arrived at the ceremony and came over to the group of parents from Bruce Monroe to greet them. As I reached out to shake his hand and ask him a few question, he proceeded to walk away and say, “I’m busy.  I’m already late.  I don’t have time for this,” and walked away. All of this happened in front of my three children.

After the ceremony, we all walked down to veiw the mural. As we looked at the mural, I tried to explain to my boys how the mural was related to our community and the school but I couldn’t. Because we didn’t have an opportunity for input, the mural didn’t’ reflect the community. While explaining this to my boys, Councilmember Graham rudely interrupted me and asked my boys if they wanted to take a picture with him. My 9-year-old (at the time), Keon Houston, held his head up as high as he could, looked him in the eye with no fear and said” No Sir, we want our school back.”  His 2 younger brothers, LaMarr Houston, Jr and Renard Gray, who were five and seven at the time, said “Yeah, Rebuild Bruce Monroe!” At that moment, I was so very proud of my children and I realized how much of a positive influence Empower DC had had on them. Not just the adult advocates but the children as well became leader amongst their peers.

The parents, staff, community members and students of Bruce Monroe at Parkview Elementary have worked very hard and sacrificed many days and weekends to ensure that the community is informed about the things that the city officials are doing to its constituency.  There is supposed to be $20.3 million dollars secured in the Master Facilities Plan for the modernization of Bruce Monroe at Parkview. At the end of the 2011/2012 school year, we will receive $5.5 million dollars for the first phase of modernization starting after the last day of school. The first phase consists of remodeling classrooms and fresh paint but the problems with the Parkview building are not just cosmetic.  The building is almost 100 years old and it functions that way.  There is a great need for a new plumbing system, an electrical upgrade as well as proper ventilation and heating systems. We also have a continued rodent infestation problem that has not yet been resolved. So, you see, even though we are receiving $5.5 million for a phase1 modernization, we are still in a fight to make sure that what we get is quality sustainable.

Since the election of our new mayor Gray, we have been in contact with the proper officials regarding these issues and we are scheduled to meet once again with our Councilmember Jim Graham and the Deputy Mayor for Education Anthony DeGuzman to complete the details and planning of our phase 1 modernization.

It has been a long, hard and continuing struggle but with the support of Empower DC and the community we know this can happen and that we can make a change. To those facing similar problems in theirs communities, take action, raise your voice and become a member of EMPOWER DC.

Sincerely,

 

Sequnely Gray (Parent Leader @ Bruce Monroe @ Parkview)

 

Parents Just Don’t Understand

DCPS student Quintess Bond has produced a digital story that anyone who has a child in school should see. I’ve posted it here along with her introduction below. Enjoy.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gMUou3dZK4

“I am a senior at School Without Walls Senior High in Washington, DC. S.W.W. happens to be recognized as the top public school in the area with a 100% graduation rate, 100% 4-year college acceptance rate, and 100% reading and math proficiency rate amongst it 500+ students. It is among three public high schools in the DC area that has won the National Blue Ribbon title, and is acknowledged as one of the top schools in the Nation.

With that being said, my story tells the experience as I arrive to this school. As I explained, my experience was not always the best because of the pressure I felt from my mom to be perfect, academically. This story is not to bash my mom for being a so-called ‘tiger mom,’ but to show the vital role my mom plays in my success. My parents, from the beginning, set a strong foundation for me in education and have high expectations for my brother and me; I am blessed to have parents that care.

Personally, I see parents’ lack of concern for their children’s education a problem. School Without Walls has strong parental involvement compared to that of other schools in the District. Academically, those schools with higher parental involvement tend to do better. So this is for parents who just don’t understand how much their concern can change their child’s life.”

Who Decides the Fate of Bruce Monroe Elementary School?

Have you ever heard the phrase, “if you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu?”  The Parents and Friends of Bruce Monroe Elementary School thought they were at the table when former School Chancellor Michelle Rhee and soon to be former Mayor Adrian Fenty promised that the school would be rebuilt by the fall of 2011.  They sent their children off to Parkview Elementary School on Warder Street NW, out of the site of hungry developers and the passing traffic that helps keeps crime on Georgia Avenue at bay.

While test scores dropped and rodents infested the cafeteria, the $20.3 million allegedly put aside to help rebuild the school seemingly disappeared.  The city did manage to come up with $2 million to construct an interim-use park on the site, so as not to remind the community that they don’t have the school they were promised.   The first request for proposals that the city put out didn’t garner any serious takers now that Georgia Avenue doesn’t look like the developers dream that it was before the recession.  And the latest RFP requires that developers submit two proposals, one for a school with commercial elements and one for commercial development only.  No school included.  Our presumptive mayor Vincent Gray has gone from saying that the promise made to the Bruce Monroe parents was a “cruel joke,” to “we can only afford one school,” meaning either Bruce Monroe or Parkview.

On August 10th, when the city planned to present this new RFP to developers, the Parents and Friends of Bruce Monroe Elementary School, were not invited to the table, as is blatantly clear in the video posted above.   But being unwilling to be eaten alive, they showed up in force anyway.

Having community members show up at a meeting that was clearly meant for developers only may help to keep the Bruce Monroe site in the hands of the city’s residents.  The Parents and Friends of Bruce Monroe Elementary School are scheduled to meet with Mayor Elect Gray, Ward One Councilmember Jim Graham and Council Chair Kwame Brown on Tuesday November 16.  At the Ward One Town Hall meeting, Vince Gray expressed his appreciation for the activism of the Bruce Monroe community and claimed to be an activist himself.  Next week will tell us whether he’s also willing to give them a meaningful position at the negotiating table.

To get involved in the Campaign to Rebuild Bruce Monroe, contact Empower DC’s education organizer Daniel Del Pialago at Daniel@empowerdc.org.