Chicago Sun-Times

Gripes and gratitude aired at CPS capital budget hearing

- BY CARLOS BALLESTERO­S, STAFF REPORTER cballester­os@suntimes.com | @ ballestero­s_ 312

Parents and community members voiced a mix of compliment­s and concerns Thursday over Chicago Public Schools’ near- billion dollar 2019 capital plan at a public hearing hosted at Malcolm X College.

CPS chief financial officer Jennie Huang Bennett, Network 3 chief Randel Josserand and senior policy adviser Cameron Mock hosted the meeting.

Mock quickly went over an abridged Power Point version of the $ 989 million 2019 capital plan, highlighti­ng the size and scope of the funds to be distribute­d.

Some parents and school stakeholde­rs thanked CPS for allocating funds to their schools to address immediate needs.

Dr. Allison C. Tingwall, principal of Curie Metropolit­an High School in Archer Heights, thanked CPS for allocating funds for two case managers and one full- time social worker to service her 3,000 students.

But most of the speakers on Thursday derided the capital budget plan.

Their main gripes are long- running: CPS funds are distribute­d unequally along racial and neighborho­od lines, and there is a lack of transparen­cy as to how CPS decides to allocate its funds.

Many cited WBEZ’s analysis of the capital plan that found that mixed or majority white schools will receive around $ 2,800 per student in investment while majority black and Latino schools will get less than half of that.

( The report does not take into account $ 355 million of the capital budget plan in its analysis because CPS has yet to specify how it will spend those funds.)

Judy Rose is a parent of a senior at Richard T. Crane Medical Preparator­y High School on the Near West Side. She asked officials why the school didn’t receive funding to fix its dilapidate­d boiler system.

“When I see that RTC Medical Prep doesn’t get the funding it needs for another year, I am incensed,” she said. “Why can’t RTC get adequate heating?”

Carlos Ballestero­s is a corps member in Report for America, a not- for- profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun- Times coverage of issues affecting Chicago’s South and West sides.

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