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Photo by Shayna Fields-Clark/Tell Us Detroit

 


Third time no charm: Detroit City Council stalls on Mayoral Control of DPS issue

Karen Hudson Samuels/Tell Us Detroit

DETROIT (Tell Us Det) - The Detroit City Council drew an overflow crowd with outspoken opinions on who should control the city’s school district, during a public hearing Tuesday. However, in the third time in as many weeks, Council tabled further deliberation on the issue.

By a 5 to4 vote the council decided not to have the question of Mayoral control on the agenda. Instead, they turned the matter over to an internal committee to determine whether control of DPS will be up for a vote in November. The committee will meet today (Wednesday) and is expected to submit a motion to Council in the next few days.

However, time is running out on choosing among the options of an elected school board, mayoral control or a hybrid of the two. Council faces an August 24th deadline for placing an advisory question on the November ballot. In the meantime, the debate has turned heated and controversial.

Council President Charles Pugh repeatedly called for order during Tuesday’s prolonged five hour session as opposing sides raised their voices to be heard. "There's no one in this room that can deny that DPS needs change," said Council President Pro Tem Gary Brown; a point few could dispute.

At one point security had to remove a young teenager for his profane language and opposition to Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan’s support of mayoral control for Detroit, he said council should to "Go to Washington D.C." and "Get on his ass".

On one side of the debate is Change for Better School which supports Mayoral control but wants voters to ultimately decide at the ballot box. The group is composed of parent, religious and civic organizations who say the Detroit School Board has failed to provide stable governance and quality education for the city’s school children.

Opponents, lead by School Board president Anthony Adams, are wary of having residents voting on who controls the district, primarily because the state legislature would then have authority to determine how the governance structure would be organized. Those in opposition also point to l the last takeover of DPS by the state which left the district in debt, a predicament now in the hands of Emergency Financial Manager Robert Bobb.
 

 

 

 

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