Category: Education Matters

State, City, and District Budgets Are Under the Microscope

In the red … or in the black, the Fiscal 2018 District budget puts Hartford at a crucial crossroads.  Jobs certainly will be lost as positions get cut, but many always are preserved because (through natural moves) attrition opens up staff opportunities for those who otherwise might be cut loose.  The numbers will constantly adjust.  But what are the most urgent issues?

 

Because our newsletter is not a book, we only can offer a partial list of what most warrants attention, drawn from the April 18th Hartford Board of Education meeting on video here and also from this past Monday’s Board Finance Committee discussion.  Please look at the video and consider our synopsis of the foremost issues, here:

 

  1. Collaboration with the State legislative delegation will be key.  HPS is tracking proposed bills and meeting with the delegation, which now includes Hartford Federation of Teachers’ VP Josh Hall, who succeeds new State Senator Doug McCrory in that General Assembly position.
  2. Consolidation conversation must begin.  Board Member Juan Hernandez questioned when the agonizing efficiency effort will start, to reduce the numbers of facilities so as to raise school quality. If unattended, he advised, this unavoidable conversation will be back on the same table next year.
  3. Public involvement and lack thereof, is not trivial.  As District Chief Financial Officer Paula Altieri pointed out at the Finance Committee meeting Monday, no community members were on hand to provide feedback (except Vanessa de la Torre of the Hartford Courant and us. Our view is that the media and us, the quasi-media, don’t really count!).  Will there be any further, well-publicized public hearings and meetings?
  4. Big Question. Board Chair Craig Stallings spoke of having “hamburger money while looking at filet mignon needs,” and asked whether necessary services are getting lost.  Others at the table echoed that thought: Where are essential school services for students going?
  5. The Detail. Here is the handout on the proposed HPS budget.

 

These considerations – and more – warrant attention at all policy making levels, especially within our State legislative delegation, which could and should be more involved in tackling education funding disparities as they affect small town and big city children – and their teachers.  The inability to derive reliable and equitable State funding for college and career readiness might be our state’s most distressing achievement gap.


Question at Yale: Can Can Community Organizing Be a Game Changer?

Among the many ear-to-the-ground indicators surfacing at the annual Yale School of Management (SOM) Educational Leadership Conference April 6-7 were recurring references to the importance of community organizing at the state, county, city, and school district levels: This can be the key to activating people’s voices – and votes.

 

With the Hartford Board of Education election coming up this fall – and the historically low voter participation levels (well below 10 percent) – attention to community organizing could make a real difference.

 

As well, the work of the Blue Hills Civic Association to gain community interest and involvement in the Weaver High School redesign is yet another crucial, local example of how listening and learning can inform everyone at the table.  But first there has to be a table!

 

At the Yale conference, when Pastor William McCullough of the Faith Acts for Education organization described his work in Bridgeport, he noted that among more than 500 parents and community members engaged, 97 percent got registered to vote.  “There are times when you can’t change mindset,” he advised, “so then you have to mobilize.”

 

Pahara Institute Founder and CEO Kim Smith opened the Yale meeting with the admonition that our society needs to specify who we are talking about empowering – and attend to the central issues, like poverty and the sustainability of strong teachers.

 

Later, Executive Vice President Derrell Bradford of 50can closed the Yale conference with the statement that the failures to serve children, whether by policy, politics, or partisanship, are a national disgrace.

 

A common point of emphasis throughout the conference sessions concerned the seismic clash between disempowerment through systemic racism, and ineffectual (vague, verbose, and gone-with-the-wind) statements about empowerment.  The point was, it’s not enough to look good on paper.  Related points regarding the benefits of community organizing included these:

 

  • CT State Board of Education Member Erik Clemons bemoaned the fact that, as an African American, his “face” is desired at the table – but not necessarily his voice. Those in power need to consider relinquishing some of their comfort so that those who are most vulnerable have some hope, he reflected.  By way of listening, he added, “You need to ask the people who are suffering what they
  • Families and other stakeholders deserve a clear reading of what their city and districts will do budget-wise, school by school, so that they can be empowered. Otherwise, even public officials will both be confused as to what to do … and have no meaningful seat at the table to find out.
  • As CEO Smith put it, binary thinking (‘I’m right, you’re wrong’, etc.) doesn’t work.   Be open-minded enough to consider both Ta-Nehisi Coates’ letter to his son about American racism and its lack of resolution … and the J.D. Vance Hillbilly Elegy concerning the mortality rates of rural whites.
  • Pastor McCullough, among others, also argued for broad confrontation of issues: jobs, housing, minimum wage, quality of life. “Schools are a huge driver of where people want to live,” he said, but they alone cannot solve society’s problems.  In 90-minute lunches informing stakeholders – including 30 church leaders, he said, he has been able to build relationships and forge activism.

Here is our previous article about the Yale conference deliberations; our series will continue with an examination of how incomprehensible budgets are disempowering.


What Are You Doing on Thursday, May 11th?

Inspire Hartford is not only an annual tradition to showcase the accomplishments of great teachers and children in our city: It’s about the trajectory on which students ride to their fullest, most desired potential.  And we ride with them.  So should you.

 

For several years, Achieve Hartford! has held community events designed to showcase the superlatives and skills – and accomplishments – of Hartford students and teachers.  Please consider joining us May 11th for this annual celebration!


Contact Us

Achieve Hartford!
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Hartford, CT 06106

 

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