Monday, December 7, 2015

Michigan EAA, Detroit Public Schools and "The Elected Ones"

The Michigan Governor's office has expressed extreme concern on the educational achievement of Detroit Public Schools.

Actually, Michigan's Governor's office has kept the same child policies for years, going all the way back to Granholm.

The administrative corruption, at the expense of the students, in Detroit Public Schools goes back as far as the first federal complaint I filed against them.

But now, the problem has escalated.

Detroit has the highest rate of child poverty in the nation.

It is well documented that children in poverty do not thrive, specifically for this example, educationally.

It is also well documented that Detroit has the highest rates of cognitive and psychological developmental disorders in the nation, if not in the world.

Michigan, and the nation, continues to thinly slice opaque slivers away from the resources and services specifically designed for the purposes of improving a child's welfare, which is inclusive of the mother, father, and any other degree of consanguinity or affinity.

Children are suppose to be the most precious treasures of the City of Detroit, which I made sure was adopted by the Charter Commission, economically having  explained the term as an investment in the best interests of the child to garner future, profitable returns of a productive, tax paying citizen.

So far, all the elected ones can do is make a public spectacle of themselves, lacking in form and substance of their argument.

"Snyder bad.  DPS good."

Allow me to break this down, again...

The Michigan EAA was created as a pilot model, to privatize the schools through religious-based, nonprofit, tax exempt organizations that can never be externally audited.

Michigan is still looking to lose a whole bunch of federal dollars if it does not get its child welfare services together, this includes education.

Michigan already has rammed the policies in place to deregulate child welfare through privatization, meaning, there is nothing a person can do but listen to the directed services of the child, which of course is also privatized and a Medicaid billable.

Detroit sucked so badly in its posterity (as I have identified via the U.S. Constitution as child welfare; hence "precious treasures") model that the Madame Corrigan came down as DHS Director to snatch its Head Start and a few other child welfare programming authorities and its federal dollars.

Privatization was in full swing and the elected ones just sat there chanting "EAA bad, DPS good."

If the "elected ones" are so damned concerned on the educational achievement of the students, then start by offering quality and affordable housing, change the educational model, and provide proper health care for those children, and their families, who are entering the second generation of losing everything.

It's a Rousseau thing.

This is what Senator Knollenberg really wanted to say, but, ya know, was like, sooooo, emotionally charged, like um, about, like how bad it is for those lil kids in Detroit who don't look like, um...well...um....don't look like him.

#KnollenbergIsAnAsshole.

MUST-WATCH: GOP Sen. Knollenberg makes blatantly racist comments at an education hearing.
Posted by Progress Michigan on Friday, December 4, 2015

16 DPS schools could change to charters under state plan

DETROIT (WJBK) - FOX 2 has learned the schools in the Educational Achievement  Authority, as well as 16 schools, could soon turn into charter schools.

DPS and EAA are putting out a request for proposals from charter school operators Friday, and that has Detroit's delegation of state lawmakers ticked off.

They say they knew nothing about this plan until they were tipped off Thursday, but for weeks they had been in talks with the parties involved.

"This is a blatant attack to tear up our public school system and it's time for it to end now," said Rep. Brian Banks (D-Harper Woods)

The Detroit caucus of state lawmakers are fuming after getting wind of  a joint EAA and DPS plan to charter 31 schools - 16 from DPS and all 15 in Gov. Rick Snyder's Educational Achievement Authority.

"Charters don't outperform, there are some that do very well," said State Sen. Bert Johnson (D-Detroit). "But on par with the rest. They do no outperform DPS schools."

"If those parents wanted their kids in charter schools they would've placed them in charter schools," Banks said.

Detroit lawmakers learned of the plan as they were in negotiations for a Detroit schools rescue package including $700 million to cover the district's debt.

"The current 15 schools in the EAA are creating a $50 million hole in the DPS budget," said Rep. Sherry Gay-Dagnogo. "And so if we're going to add an additional 16 schools to the EAA or for them to develop a charter agreement with 31 schools then will the district be able to sustain itself?"

A spokesman for Snyder says the caucus has it wrong and it was never the governor's plan to turn DPS into a charter district.

But these lawmakers are not buying it, saying they've been in talks with the heads of DPS and the EAA, both of whom answer to Gov. Snyder and neither of whom mentioned the plans to charter 31 schools.

"The message we're sending is they need to go back to the drawing board," Johnson said. "And they need to bring us to the table immediately. They need to scrap this plan because nobody is going to sign off on this plan, anyone that has a D and a Detroit by their name."

DPS released a statement saying "It has not made any decisions to charter additional schools and the joint RFP with the EAA is a tool that will allow it have a list of qualified charter providers as it considers school portfolio options moving forward."

"The whole charter school movement has been a failed experiment," said Ivy Bailey, interim president of the Detroit Federation of Teachers. "This is not fair to our students, to our community members and definitely not fair to our teachers."

According to the timeline for the RFP, which was leaked to those lawmakers, charter school lawmakers will have to submit their applications by Feb. 1 and the final decision that would go into who runs those 31 schools would be made in April.

Gov. Snyder appointed the heads of EAA and the Emergency Manager for the district.

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