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District to lay off teachers at end of month

By: Leah Fabel
Examiner Staff Writer
September 17, 2009

D.C. Public Schools officials will lay off teachers and staff at the end of September to shore up a multimillion-dollar shortfall in the school system's budget, Chancellor Michelle Rhee said Wednesday.

Rhee estimated the district could be short as much as $40 million, but said an amount would not be certain until the official enrollment was determined in October. How many employees will lose their jobs is impossible to estimate because different schools will deal with their cuts differently, she said. One principal might choose to lay off a teacher making $100,000, while another might lose three classroom aides each making $33,000.

Washington Teachers' Union officials, furious about the timing of the cuts, lashed out at Rhee for nurturing a fear among veteran teachers that she is trying to sweep them out of the system.

Announcing the cuts three weeks into the school year "at best reflects extreme mismanagement and a lack of transparency," said union President George Parker.

Rhee said every school system went through the fall balancing act between enrollment and funding and that announcing cuts in September instead of October caused fewer disruptions. Parker also questioned how reductions came to be needed after the schools hired about 900 new teachers over the summer -- a fact he called "mindboggling." According to the school system, principals made their final hires in July based on spring estimates of how much money they would have. Then in August, the D.C. Council announced more cuts. Rhee said it was too late to fire new hires at that point, whether teachers or secretaries or custodians. "We had to give every employee an equal shot at proving themselves in that school -- that's what was fair," she said. Parker took umbrage with that idea, asking, "How do you prove yourself in just four weeks?" Principals have been instructed to treat each employee equally when handling firings, regardless of tenure. Not all schools will need to make cuts. About 45 percent of schools have exceeded enrollment projections and could receive more money. About 70 percent of schools are at least 95 percent full, and 85 percent are at least 85 percent full.

lfabel@washingtonexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Sep 17, 2009

Rhee appears to be lying again. How can you prove yourself in four weeks? Moreover, what happened to the hundreds of other people she dismissed? They hadn't had a chance to prove themselves against the inexperienced, uncredentialed chancellor. And look who she answers to, a proven failure of an elected official. How much more has to happen until someone takes a look at Michelle Rhee's practices and the mayor who covers for her?

 

Truelive

Sep 17, 2009

Teachers are a vital part of the learning enviroment, from a students point of veiw. Less does not mean better. Our succrss depends on getting the best education, based on the classroom materials, resources and the teachers. Outside politics and constant changes brings negative interferance to our learning settings. You must all realize that we are the future and what transpires today will in effect ripple into tomorrow. How do you expect us to be well educated if their is constant choas in our education system?

 

Sep 17, 2009

Every employee of DCPS should go to the EEOC and file a complaint. How can people not see what is happening? All of the people being fired/non-renewed/terminated or whatever semantics are used to cover all of these wrongful terminations are nearly forty and over, black and hispanic and mostly female. If a white man was doing these things, civil rights activists would be in DC raising hell. But since it's a Korean female who is committing all of these misdeeds, no one wants to call it what it is: racism, cunning and deceit. Wake up people!!

 

goss

Sep 18, 2009

Rhee was only a teacher for 3 years. Everything else is self inflated gloss- not enough though- she didn't get that Secretary of Education spot- that went to someone who was a teacher for 0 years.

 

fred

Sep 18, 2009

Fire all the Math, Science, History, and English teachers. DC kids don't care about those classes anyways.

Keep football, basketball, band, drama, choir. These are the professions they think they are going to be in one day and we just keep on encouraging them.

 


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