Chicago Sun-Times

DESPITE OUTCRY, CPS TO CLOSE SUCCESSFUL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

- Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman BY FRANSPIELM­AN City Hall Reporter

An outcry from parents — and the highest possible academic rating — could not save the National Teachers Academy from being closed in favor of a new neighborho­od high school serving parts of the South Loop, Bronzevill­e, Bridgeport and Chinatown.

The Chicago Public Schools made that clear Friday, finalizing school closing and consolidat­ion decisions previously on the drawing board and at least one new action.

Under the plan, the elementary school would be phased out over several years.

In October, protesters gathered outside Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s house, voicing their opposition to the plan to close the school, located at 55 W. Cermak. Protesters have said the decision to convert NTA is “the definition of neocolonia­lism.”

Under the proposal released Friday, Roosevelt High School, which currently serves students from seventh through 12th grades, will phase out those middle school students from Haugan and Henry Elementary Schools over the next two school years.

That marks a reversal for CPS, which put middle school students into Roosevelt just a few years ago in an apparent attempt to prop up the struggling and half- empty high school.

CPS announced in June that Chicago’s rebounding Englewood community will get a new $ 75 million high school, but pay the price for it by closing four under- enrolled high schools: Harper, Hope, Robeson and TEAM Englewood.

Friday’s news dump also raises the price tag for the new Englewood high school — to $ 85 million — and makes it clear that none of the students currently attending the four soon- to- be- shuttered high schools will have the benefit of attending the new high school.

Instead, the new Englewood high school will open to freshmen in the fall of 2019 and add another class of freshmen in each of the following three years, ultimately serving 1,200 students.

On Thursday, the Chicago Teachers Union got wind of Friday’s announceme­nt and called an “emergency” news conference to denounce a move, the union claimed, that would “destabiliz­e” Englewood.

“This is one more maneuver in the effort by Mayor Emanuel and his cronies to push out black workingcla­ss families in Englewood and across our South and West Side neighborho­ods,” CTU Vice President Jesse Sharkey was quoted as saying in a press release. “We need and we demand investment in sustainabl­e community schools instead of disinvestm­ent, neglect and dismantlem­ent of treasured community anchors like these schools on Rahm’s hit list.”

Sharkey argued that the decision to open the new Englewood high school to successive classes of freshmen means that the new high school will not be the “vibrant new option” that parents were promised.

“Emanuel and his hand- picked school bureaucrat­s sold this proposed new Englewood high school on the basis of a lie,” Sharkey said.

CPS has also set aside $ 14 million to “transition students and school communitie­s” to all of the consolidat­ions, including $ 8.3 million for the students moving out of the four Englewood high schools.

All of CPS proposals would have to be approved by a vote of the Chicago Board of Education, which could come as early at February 2018.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Parents and supporters of National Teachers Academy Elementary School protest outside Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s Ravenswood neighborho­od home in October.
| SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Parents and supporters of National Teachers Academy Elementary School protest outside Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s Ravenswood neighborho­od home in October.

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