Somehow We All Missed This?

Update:

I probably fired off too quickly. Yes, I know that the district has SAID they aren't closing schools at the earliest in '25-'26. But listening in on Board Work Sessions on the budget, it seems to come up every time. Seems weird if it's settled that they would waste one minute on closures and yet they do.

Going on decades of experience and my Spidey sense, but I don't think they will wait that long. I don't say that lightly; I know parents and school communities are worried but that hole in the budget is huge.

end of update.

 

So I'm reading the Seattle Times this morning and there was a story about community partnerships to continue jazz and music programs in Seattle Schools. In that story was a bit of a big surprise:

The district has ruled out closing and consolidating schools as part of its deficit response for the 2024-25 school year and has said that budget cuts have been mainly confined to the central office. School-level cuts were generally one-time expenditures and related to supplies, said Art Jarvis, the deputy superintendent of academics.

That might not be the case for future years. Budget proposals for the 2025-26 year will be made public in May and might contain deeper building-level cuts.

“Certainly we’ve got major work to do for [20]25-26, and that would impact the buildings if, in fact, we can’t find the tools to right-size the district,” Jarvis said.

I have written to district communications about this news. I did check the Budget information page at SPS and, to my surprise, there was this:

The School Board is scheduled to preview the proposed 2024-25, 2025-26, and 2026-27 budgets [budgets may include program and personnel changes for 2024-25 and school consolidation for 2025-26] on April 3.

The superintendent will present a plan to realize the vision for a system of well-resourced schools in May 2024. This plan may include school consolidations for the 2025-26 school year and beyond, grade level reorganizations, and program adjustments and restructuring.
 
Honestly, I can't see how I missed this, along with so many other people. I did ask if there had been an announcement that closure and consolidation had been taken off the table for '24-'25 school year as well as any Board announcement. 

If they said this at any of the Work Sessions on the budget, I somehow completely missed it. 

One last interesting bit of info that I also found odd from the same story. Apparently, there are folks raising money for a statue of long-time, award-winning Garfield High band director, Clarence Acox. 

The Onyx Fine Arts Collective also approached the district about erecting the Acox statue on the Garfield High School grounds, but, so far, the district has demurred.

While the district does not have a policy on putting statues on school property, Jarvis said doing so for one individual could be seen as endorsing everything that that person has done. The district, he said, does not want to be put in that position.

That seems odd because many school buildings are named for people and I never heard that argument used when that happened.


Comments

Anonymous said…
Yep, this was announced at the Nov. 15 School Board meeting. Seattle Hall Pass was leaked this information from an anonymous source a couple of days before that meeting and we covered it in our episode on November 13: https://www.seattlehallpass.org/2230213/13967594-e12-extra-the-superintendent-s-tightrope

This was approved by the School Board when they voted on the Fiscal Stabilization Plan on Nov. 13. It says: "School consolidations, to be implemented in the 2025-26 school year and beyond."

Seattle Times covered it here: https://www.seattletimes.com/education-lab/no-seattle-schools-will-close-next-year-superintendent-says/

—Jane from Seattle Hall Pass
Concerned Parent said…
Do you think this timing could be related at all to the fact that is the same year when the teachers will be negotiating a new contract? 2025-26 is when the next strike may happen. A teacher we know who is involved in SEA recently mentioned a meeting about closures.

Or do you think they are just delaying as long as possible?
I will say there are state laws on school closures but I had thought SPS would have the time to get it all in place before '24-'25.

As you mention, there are things in play like the teachers contract but also Superintendent Jones' contract. That should be quite the contrast between the two contracts because I think Jones will want to stay and the Board does NOT want to launch a superintendent search. But they will give him a good raise to get him to stay.

I think the district would like to close some buildings as soon as they can. I'll review the Work Session on the Budget at last night's Board meeting but, looking at the materials, they are about at the end of what they can do. But with the sadness/anger it will bring PLUS those other contract negotiations, the delay is probably better.

But it sure will leave some schools even more underresourced for the next couple of years which will be painful.

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