Medicine Hat News

Philadelph­ia moves to retake control of city school system

- ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

PHILADELPH­IA The mayor of Philadelph­ia on Thursday took steps to take control of the city’s struggling public school system after 16 years of state oversight.

Mayor Jim Kenney said that it is time for the city to be accountabl­e for the education of its 200,000 schoolchil­dren.

“If we don’t take responsibi­lity for the fate of our schools, then we will continue to relegate generation­s of Philadelph­ia’s families to poverty,” he said.

Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf, a fellow Democrat, supports local control. So the commission that now governs the nation’s eighth-largest school system is expected to be dissolved by the end of the school year and be replaced by a mayor-appointed school board.

Philadelph­ia schools face a $100 million deficit in the next fiscal year and project a $1 billion deficit by fiscal year 2022.

More than a third of the district’s students have been siphoned off by charter schools, which get public funds, as the district has had to shutter more than 24 schools and lay off nearly 4,000 employees.

Kenney wants the city to cover the budget deficit as well as some capital improvemen­ts, including remodeling of classrooms and libraries, though he didn’t say where the money would come from.

“There will be no easy solutions for funding these resources,” he said. “The district has nothing left to cut.”

“So, the final plan we will propose to meet the district’s needs will be difficult, and it will require everyone to pitch in — but the alternativ­e is far worse,” the mayor said.

The state seized control of the school district in 2001 as it struggled with a huge deficit, low test scores, chronic teacher shortages and crumbling buildings. At the time, it was the largest district in the country to be taken over by a state government.

The president of the Philadelph­ia Federation of Teachers said in a statement that Kenney has taken “a huge step toward ending what has been a long, failed experiment in state control of public schools”

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