The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Indian schools face decayed buildings, poverty

- By KimberlyHe­fling

WINSLOW, ARIZ.>> Federally owned schools for Native Americans on reservatio­ns are marked by remoteness, extreme poverty and a lack of constructi­on dollars. They also are among the nation’s lowest performing.

he Obama administra­tion is pushing ahead with an improvemen­t plan that gives tribes more control. But the effort is complicate­d by the disrepair of so many buildings, not to mention the federal legacy of forcing American Indian children from their homes to attend boarding schools.

Consider Little Singer Community School, with 81 students on a remote desert outpost. The vision for the school came in the 1970s from a medicine man who wanted area children to attend school locally. Here’s the reality today: a cluster of rundown class roombuildi­ngs containing asbestos, radon, mice andmold.

Students often come from families struggling with domestic violence, alcoholism­and a lack of running water at home, so nurturing is emphasized. The school provides showers, along with shampoo and washing machines.

Teachers have no housing, so they commute together about 90 minutes each morning on barely passable dirt roads.

The school is on the government’s priority list for replacemen­t. It’s been there since at least 2004. Not even one-quarter of students were deemed proficient in reading and math on a 2012-2013 assessment.

“We have little to work with, but we make do with what we have,” says Verna Yazzie, a school board member.

The 183 schools are spread across 23 states and fall under the jurisdicti­on of the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Education.

They are insome of themost outof-the-way places in America; one is at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, reachable by donkey or helicopter. Most are small, with fewer than 150 students.

Native Americans perform better in schools that are not overseen by the federal bureau than in schools that are, national and state assessment­s show. Overall, they trail their peers in an important national assessment and strugglewi­th a graduation rate of 68 percent.

Already, tribes manage about 120 schools, and the plan will turn the rest over as Washington shifts to more of a support role.

The plan calls for more boardcerti­fied teachers, better Internet access and less red tape, making it easier to buy books and hire teachers. The Interior Department wants to help schools accelerate the use of Native American languages and culture.

Lofty ambitions, but the rundown state of many schools can’t be ignored.

More than 60 are listed in poor condition. An estimated $1.3 billion is needed to replace or refurbish these schools. But since the 2009 release of about $280 million in stimulus money, little has gone tomajor school constructi­on or renovation.

So Interior Secretary Sally Jewell in a tight spot.

She recently visited Crystal Boarding School on the Navajo reservatio­n in Crystal, New Mexico, where some classes are held in a building constructe­d by Depression-era workers.

The school is now primarily a day school, but about 30 kids stay in dorms there. A second dormwas condemned.

Jewell thanked the students for “making do with this school theway it is.” Later, she told school leaders she could not promise the money will be there to build a new school.

“For schools throughout Indian country, this is a chronic problem,” she said. “Idon’twant tostandher­e and make promises I can’t keep. What I want to say is, I get it.”

The effort to shift more control to tribes has drawn some praise. “It’s an important step for us to go ahead and take control over what we knowwe can do best,” saysKimber­ly Dominguez, Crystal’s vice principal.

Others, though, sayWashing­ton is merely washing its hands of its responsibi­lities.

Aubrey Francisco, 40, who attended Crystal and sends his 6-year-old son there, questions whether Navajo leaders can continue the school’s legacy. “With the tribe and its limited resources, they need to take that into account,” he said.

Ahniwake Rose, executive director of the National Indian Education Associatio­n, said her organizati­on is cautiously optimistic, partly out of appreciati­on that Obama is seemingly engaged.

At Little Singer, Etta Shirley, the principal, said she has some optimism, too. One glimmer of hope: A House spending bill contains nearly $60 million for constructi­on at Little Singer and two other bureau schools.

“We need to get the kids out of the environmen­t,” Shirley said. “That’s what’s really driving this. I lose sleep over it, just thinking about it.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Sept. 25photo, students walk between buildings at the Little Singer Community School in Birdspring­s, Ariz. on the Navajo Nation. Like other schools in the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Education, remoteness, extreme poverty,...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Sept. 25photo, students walk between buildings at the Little Singer Community School in Birdspring­s, Ariz. on the Navajo Nation. Like other schools in the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Education, remoteness, extreme poverty,...

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