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30,704
Voters
Express
Desire
for
Change
at DPS
Group
urges
citywide
vote on
mayoral
oversight
of
school
system
DETROIT–
Advocates
for
Detroit
Public
Schools
accountability
said
today
they
will
present
petitions
containing
more
than
30,000
signatures
to
Detroit
City
Council
urging
it to
schedule
a
November
referendum
on the
future
governance
of
Detroit
Public
Schools.
The
30,704
signatures,
90% of
which
are
verified,
were
collected
by
Change
for
Better
Schools,
a broad
coalition
of
parents,
community
leaders
and
civic
leaders
frustrated
by years
of
political
infighting
and
other
unprofessional
behavior
by the
Detroit
Board of
Education
and its
failure
to
deliver
a
quality
education
for
Detroit
students.
The
group
wants
the
Council
to put
the
question
of
mayoral
accountability
for DPS
before
voters
on the
November
ballot.
Coalition
leaders
said
they
will
formerly
present
the
petitions
to
Council
at its
Tuesday
session.
“Our
goal is
to
create a
stable
form of
governance
for DPS
that
would
create
an
environment
to
provide
Detroit
students
the
quality
education
they
need to
succeed
in
today’s
world,”
said
committee
co-chair
Rev.
Larry
Simmons,
Pastor,
Baber
Memorial
AME
Church.
“Clearly
the
current
board
has
failed
miserably.
Something
has to
change.
To
continue
down the
same
path and
do
nothing
for our
children
would be
unconscionable.”
Co-chairs
of
change
for
Better
Schools
are
Simmons,
N.
Charles
Anderson,
President,
Detroit
Urban
League;
Delores
Bennett,
Founder
and
Director,
North
End
Youth
Improvement
Council;
Eva
Garza
Dewaelsche,
Tina
Nelson,
Parent
Activist;
Alice
Thompson,
CEO,
Black
Family
Development
and
David
Baker
Lewis,
Chairman,
Lewis &
Munday
as
treasurer.
The
Detroit
Public
Schools
have
suffered
from a
chronically
high
dropout
rate,
now
estimated
at near
30
percent,
while
students
perform
far
below
national
standards
in
academic
performance.
Detroit
students
scored
the
worst
scores
of any
school
district
in the
nation
in
history
on both
the math
and
reading
sections
of the
National
Assessment
of
Educational
Progress
during
the past
school
year.

Change
for
Better
Schools
(CFBS)
Co-Chairs
and
Member
Penny
Bailer,
Executive
Director,
City
Year
Detroit,
CFBS
member
N.
Charles
Anderson,
President,
Detroit
Urban
League,
CFBS
Co-Chair,
Alice
Thompson,
CEO,
Black
Family
Development,
CFBS
Co-Chair,
Rev.
Larry
Simmons,
Pastor,
Baber
Memorial
AME
Church,
CFBS
Co-Chair,
Tina
Nelson,
Parent
Activist,
CFBS
Co-Chair,
Delores
Bennett,
Founder
and
Director,
North
End
Youth
Improvement
Council,
CFBS
Co-Chair
A major
cause of
DPS
problems
has been
constant
turmoil
on the
school
board
and in
the
district’s
governance.
Since
the
current
board
was
reconstituted
in 2006,
the
district
has had
four
different
superintendants.
“It is
impossible
to
create a
nurturing
educational
environment
when
there is
constant
turmoil
in the
district’s
leadership,”
said
Simmons.
“No
district
can
succeed
with
such
chaos.
Yet, if
we do
nothing,
the old
failed
board
will be
back in
charge
next
March 1.
Changing
to a
system
where
the
Mayor is
directly
accountable
for
education
will
mean
voters
have one
elected
official
they can
hold
responsible,
not a
faceless
board.”
The
petition
initiative
would
urge the
Michigan
Legislature
to
replace
the
current
school
board
structure
with a
system
where
the
mayor
would be
accountable
for DPS,
including
the
appointment
of a
superintendent
and an
advisory
board
made up
of
parents,
teachers,
civic
leaders
and
clergy.
Ultimately,
the
Michigan
Legislature
will
decide
the
future
governance
of DPS
since
all
public
schools
in
Michigan
are
under
its
jurisdiction.
Any
changes
in
governance
must be
decided
by the
Legislature.
The
petitioners
will ask
Council
to put
the
issue on
the
ballot
since
state
law does
not
contain
a
mechanism
to
petition
a
referendum
onto the
ballot.
“The
referendum
will
send a
strong
message
to
Lansing
that
Detroiters
are fed
up with
the
board’s
record
of
failure
and want
change,”
said
Simmons.
“We need
change
now. We
are
letting
our
community,
our city
and our
state
know
that the
status
quo is
not
acceptable,
we must
act
now.”
Organizers
have
taken
their
cues
from
other
cities,
such as
Boston
and New
York
that
have
implemented
mayoral
oversight
and are
seeing
improvements.
Boston
is the
longest
running
example
of
mayoral
led
public
schools,
dating
back to
1991.
Data
collected
over a
five-year
period,
from
2002 to
2007,
from the
Massachusetts
Comprehensive
Assessment
System(MCAS)
show
that10th
grade
student
math
scores
increased
by 30%
and
verbal
skills
saw a
29%
increase.
In
addition,
Boston
won the
2006
Broad
Prize in
recognition
of their
success.
New York
also
switched
to
mayoral
oversight
in 2002.
During a
five-year
period,
from
2003 to
2008,
the
graduation
rate
increased
18%; the
total
number
of
students
rated as
proficient
or
advanced
in math
increased
32%; the
total
number
of
students
rated as
proficient
or
advanced
in
verbal
skills
increased
17%. New
York
also
received
the
Broad
Prize in
2007.
(The
Skillman
Foundation-Detroit
Citywide
Educational
Turnaround
Sept.
25,
2009)
To
ensure
the
credibility
of the
signatures,
all
petition
circulators
took an
oath
pledging
their
honesty
and
transparent
representation
of the
petition.
Group
organizers
also had
90% of
the
signed
petitions
validated.
The
petition
drive
started
as an
outgrowth
of the
Excellent
Schools
city-wide
education
improvement
plan,
sponsored
by a
coalition
of
parents,
education
advocates,
and
civic
leaders.
The
Excellent
Schools
initiative
aims to
set
higher
academic
standards
for all
Detroit
students
and
increase
graduation
rates to
90%.
For more
info on
Change
for
Better
Schools
visit
www.changeforbetterschools.com.
Ballot
Language:
“Accountability
to
Improve
Public
Schools.
To
improve
Detroit’s
public
schools
and
increase
accountability
for
their
quality,
do you
favor
the
enactment
of
legislation
authorizing
the
elected
Mayor of
the City
of
Detroit,
with the
advice
of an
advisory
board
comprised
of
parents,
teachers
and
other
community
representatives,
replacing
the
school
board,
to:
•
“Appoint
and
provide
oversight
to the
superintendent,
who
shall
set the
curriculum
standards
and
goals
for
school
improvement
•
“Report
annually
to
citizens
on the
progress
of
Detroit’s
public
schools?”
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