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Laid-off D.C. teachers to protest school cuts

By: Leah Fabel
Examiner Staff Writer
October 4, 2009

Laid-off D.C. Public Schools teachers, along with students, parents and  ommunity members, are planning a Monday morning protest against last week’s round of school employee firings.

“We will be wearing black,” Candi Peterson wrote in bold letters in an e-mail to rally her supporters. Peterson, who runs a blog called The  Washington Teacher, is one of Chancellor Michelle Rhee’s most outspoken opponents.
 
Nearly 400 D.C. Public Schools employees, including 229 teachers, received notice Friday that they had been placed on administrative leave and would be out of a job on Nov. 2. Northeast’s McKinley Tech High School, where the rally will be held, was one of 12 schools to lose five or more teachers.
 
The district, with the backing of Mayor Adrian Fenty’s office, issued a statement attributing the cuts to an unanticipated $44 million budget shortfall along with efforts to match funding to enrollment. The latest student count shows enrollment at more than 45,000, up from projections.
 
But though some of the district’s 128 schools saw enrollment go over projections, others have fewer-than-expected students, and therefore fewer-than-expected dollars to fund teachers and staff.
 
However, opponents such as Peterson and the Washington Teachers’ Union leadership have called the budget shortfall figure into question, saying there was nothing unexpected about it. They condemned most vehemently the district’s decision to hire 900 new teachers over the spring and summer.
 
Council Chairman Vincent Gray reacted to the school district’s layoff announcement Friday by announcing an oversight hearing to be held later this month.
 
Gray said there was “no evident basis for the mayor’s assertion about budget cuts,” adding that the decision to fire teachers “alarmed [D.C.] families, sent shock waves through the teaching community and disrupted the education of our students.”
 
He attached figures showing that with federal stimulus dollars, perpupil funding is several hundred dollars per student higher than last year. Stimulus dollars are available only for two years, however.
 
School districts were encouraged by the U.S. Department of Education to use them on one-time expenditures, such as equipment and computer programs, and not to supplement teacher salaries.

 
 
 
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.

Lisa

Oct 5, 2009

80% of the teachers being fired are Black, over 50, and certified. Most of the teachers left are White, under 40, and uncertified. It sounds like a great law suit opportunity to me. Go lawyers! Go teachers!

 

dill

Oct 5, 2009

Teachers, teachers, teachers,-- why in the world would you even WANT to teach in DC- its not worth it. Go teach in area where the parents are responsible for raising the kids instead of the school system. It's so nice to not get blamed for every ghetto rat problem around.

 

AlexandriaOutlook

Oct 5, 2009

Those kids don't need teachers--- they need police officers!

 

james

Oct 5, 2009

the mayor and his side kick must be fied,i will protest avery day and make sure in sept.2010 the mayor will need a job after election i will volunteer to make sure he feel like our teachers...

 

Concerned Southwest Resident

Oct 5, 2009

While I respect the teacher's right to protest Superintendent Rhee's layoff decision, I question any and all leaders who would selfishly involve students. In my view, a protest in front of a school shows poor judgment by organizers, particularly when the protest will disrupt the school day and adversely impact the learning process. These students had nothing to do with this decision. You should confine your public protest to the government buildings where Rhee, Fenty, or the Council conduct their business. A rally at McKinley Tech is a huge distraction in an already dysfunctional learning environment. Shame on you.

 

Oct 6, 2009

Get it right. It's not just teachers. It's also the principals who were dismissed. They owe her the bigpayback too! It's citizens that overpay her with tax dollars and all she's done is destroy. Any jackass can tear down.

 

tonya from DC

Oct 6, 2009

I always thought you had to have a doctrine to become a Sunperintendent. So because she don't have one the mayor created this new position. That is why our school system is in so much confusion. The lady don't have a clue

 

Laquitta R. Nepali - McKinley student parent

Oct 6, 2009

I know the mayor has forgotten about the No Child Left Behind law because he is leaving all our kids and their future behind. Let us not let the mayor forget about this when it is time for re-electing a new mayor for our kids and our city.

 


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