Showing posts with label charter schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charter schools. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Timeline for Peter Deutsch & Ben Gamla Hebrew Charter School in Hallandale Beach's 2nd proposed application in 2 years; STILL not on city's website!

I will have more to say about this particular subject in the coming week on my blog, perhaps even with some Guest posts, but for now, here's the Ben Gamla Hebrew Charter School's formal application to the City of Hallandale Beach and a photo of their public notice for the city-required community meeting, now scheduled for Tuesday, October 12th at 6:00 p.m. at the Hallandale Beach Cultural Center, located behind HB City Hall.

Former U.S. Rep. Peter Deutsch, Ben Gamla's founder, will be speaking before the HB Education Advisory Committee monthly meeting the day before, on Monday the 11th, at 4:00 p.m. at Hallandale Elementary School, 900 S.W. 8th St, Hallandale Beach.

If you can manage to do so, please attend that meeting and let your voice be heard.

Most of you already know what I personally think of bully-boy Peter Deutsch and his completely over-the-top scare tactics and threats against the city and community in general, and the single-family neighborhood specifically, but in case you forgot:

http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/search/label/Ben%20Gamla%20Hebrew%20Charter%20School

The next formal step after these two meetings will be the Hallandale Beach Planning & Zoning meeting on Wednesday October 27 at 1:30 p.m. in the City Commission Chambers.

As these meetings have drawn near, many of you have asked me via emails or personal conversations a variation of these three basic questions.

a.) Whether or not I think South Florida's somnolent news media will actually wake-up and cover this controversial story and what transpired last year, now that Peter Deutsch and Co. are eager to get a bite of the apple again, and force themselves into this single-family neighborhood rather than thinking strategically and locating at any of the many sites that are much more compatible with their long-term intentions: growth into a K-12 .

b.) Whether or not I think we should expect an encore performance from the Ben Gamla management, wherein they intentionally created a false pretense in order to motivate their parents from all over Broward to descend on HB meetings, intentionally misinforming the parents so that they appear.

(Lest we remind them, these are meetings for the benefits of residents of Hallandale Beach, NOT one for Ben Gamla parents in Tamarac, Sunrise or Pembroke Pines, and no matter how much they think we will be impressed by their tales of woe about how long it takes them to drop-off or pick-up their kids at Ben Gamla, we still won't care.

When we hear these sort of tales, and we will, it's our obligation to forcibly remind these parents that that they're driving air-conditioned SUV's and Mini-vans, not horse-drawn Conestoga Wagons to California. And besides, that's not our problem, it's their CHOICE.)

c.) Whether or not I think our perpetually-AWOL Broward School Board representative, Ann Murray, will FINALLY get off her butt and STOP hiding, and actually appear at a public meeting in Hallandale Beach where concerned citizens are present and want some honest answers.

(Say, like the meeting scheduled for October 12th, so she can finally see what Peter Deutsch & Co. are really like, meetings that she has previously avoided and hidden under the bed like my sister's dog when there's a thunderstorm. Like she has nothing to do with anything.)

As most of you who come here regularly know, I have NEVER personally seen Murray in HB at a public meetings since she was first appointed to replace Eleanor Sobel, and according to all of you, based on your own answers to my specific questions, NONE OF YOU have EVER seen here, either.

Hmm-m-m... you'd think that the South Florida news media would pick up on that after more than two years.

As you look at the photos below, remember that N.E. 8th Avenue in Hallandale Beach is currently a two-lane, one-way south-bound road, about two blocks east of U.S.-1/South Federal Highway.

-

Above, looking east at the entrance of the Hallandale Jewish Center at 416 N.E. 8th Avenue.

October 3, 2010 photo by South Beach Hoosier.


Above, looking north on N.E. 8th Avenue from just south of the main building.

October 3, 2010 photo by South Beach Hoosier.


Above, looking east towards the south end of the Hallandale Jewish Center.

October 3, 2010 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

-

Above, looking southeast towards the existing parking lot south of the main building.

October 3, 2010 photo by South Beach Hoosier.


Above, looking southwest from the main building across N.E. 8th Avenue

October 3, 2010 photo by South Beach Hoosier.


Above, looking west from the main building across N.E. 8th Avenue.

October 3, 2010 photo by South Beach Hoosier.


Here are my answers to these three questions:

a.) In the year 2010, given what I've written on my blog many times, there's no point in guessing what the South Florida news media will do, since so many of them do NOT appear at self-evident news events now, even when you tell them about it well in advance.

Events that years ago would've drawn throngs of savvy media types with a nose for news, now draw a few folks, often including me.

My advice: don't hold your breath and don't take it personally.

Just remind yourself: we are currently living thru the nadir of South Florida journalism.

Period.


b.) Yes, I think the Ben Gamla folks will tell their parents that they will get "points" or credit for showing-up in HB, just like last year.

Why would they change their old tactics since they honestly believe they can mobilize more people from outside of HB than the actual turnout of regular HB citizens?

They believe they can "pack" the meetings and since Peter Deutsch will no doubt utilize his old preposterous one-sided rules, where he always gets the last word and has no time limit on what he says, the very ones that so riled the community last year, why should you expect anything different?

Peter Deutsch has already publicly stated before HB citizens that he will do anything it takes to get what he wants, regardless of what the city's elected officials, the community or the neighborhood wants.

Peter Deutsch honestly doesn't care what you think.

You should take him at his word rather than think you can reason with him.

Bullies like Deutsch will keep doing what they're doing until someone stops them.


One thing is certain, though, and that is that THAT person won't be Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper, who, despite plenty of opportunities in the ten years she's been mayor, has NEVER shown the appropriate amount of leadership on the self-evident and chronic education problems in HB, by convening at least one public meeting/forum on the subject, where everything was on the table.

Cooper STILL won't publicly say what everyone in this city and region knows to be true about the dismal state of education in this city, or the say one thing and do- another behavior of parents east of U.S.-1, especially on the beach, who won't send their own kids to schools in Hallandale Beach because they perceive the quality to be unsatisfactory and or unsafe. Period.

Cooper continues to delude herself into believing this educational cleavage in the city has nothing to do with her or City Hall, but business people and businesses considering moving here think about it, don't they?

You bet they do, which is one of the main reasons they DON'T come here and relocate elsewhere, a microcosm of the larger educational quality problem in Broward County.

Mayor Peter Bober and the Hollywood City Commission finally got so frustrated with the mediocre state of education in Hollywood, esp. at the Middle Schools, and parents complaining about the difficult choices they were facing -stay put or move?- that they took the initiative last year and convened an information-filled meeting on whether to consider creating a city charter school like Pembroke Pines.

I was there for the entire meeting that night, and it was a perfect example of the glaring differences between how city government works there, and almost always fails citizens here, less than three miles away.

And despite my justified criticism of Cooper, the reason isn't just the differences between the two mayors, but the fundamental differences between an informed and engaged City Commission in Hollywood that demands and gets honest answers from city employees, and the lapdog role of the HB Commission, constantly jumping whenever the City Manager said "jump," year-after-year, with the exception of stalwart pro-reform Comm. Keith London.

But London is just one vote, and can't force the Commission to suddenly start showing natural curiosity and thoughtful initiative, or using logic and reason when they are not inclined to.

And THEY are not inclined to!

That's why I call them the Rubber Stamp Crew, after all.

Now I'm not saying that a city charter school would be the answer to all the problems here, but why can't the mayor and city commission even show the good sense to have one public meeting on the subject of education in this city, especially when the problems aren't going to go away?


c.) Ann Murray remains a reclusive ghost to her Hallandale Beach constituents.

Why would you expect that to change now?

I am going to see to it that a letter is sent to Ann Murray formally requesting her appearance at that Tuesday advisory board meeting with Deutsch, and I will print her response here.

If Murray states that she will not attend, I will then make a formal public records request of the Broward School Board asking them to provide me with the names, dates and locations of any place in the city of Hallandale Beach that Ann Murray has appeared in her capacity as a School Board member since she was initially appointed to that position over two years ago.

I think I already know what the answer will be. And if you've been paying close attention, you do, too.

As I finish this post at 11:25 p.m., Tuesday October 5th, 2010, you might be interested in knowing that the formal Ben Gamla application STILL does NOT appear on the city's website, despite the fact that the HB Planning & Zoning Board meeting is in exactly three weeks, October 27th.

Seriously, does Peter Deutsch also get to determine when their application goes on the city's website for the public to see?

It's a public record and was received in June, as you can see for yourself.

That was four months ago.

That's a question I will ask before, during or after Wednesday's Hallandale Beach City Commission meeting to HB City Manager Mark Antonio.

http://www.hallandalebeachfl.gov/files/2010-10-06/Agenda%20Outline%20for%202010-10-06%2010-00.htm

Stay tuned!

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Geography as destiny and column-inches in the South Florida news world of 2010

Geography as destiny and column-inches in the South Florida news world of 2010.
Or, say, did you see WHERE..
But when it happened here, South Florida newspapers completely ignored it
.

The following is a corrected version of an email I sent
on Friday July 2nd to Douglas C. Lyons , the senior editorial writer and columnist at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Edward Schumacher-Matos, the Ombudsman of the Miami Herald, with a cc to the Herald's Executive Editor Anders Gylenhaal, and bccs to dozens of concerned residents throughout Broward County, including state, county and municipal elected officials and public policy activists.
(See http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/columnists/sfla-opinion-lyons,0,2553034.columnist
)

----

Oh, say did you see... these charter school stories in the newspaper, yet curiously, there was never anything about
Ben Gamla losing in HB, despite all of former congressman Peter Deutsch's verbal threats against us. Actually, I mean to say did you see WHERE...

The first of three stories is from Thursday, Carli Teproff's thorough follow-up to her May 7th story. She continues to be one of the most-accurate and fair-minded reporters at the Herald.

But tell me, why is it that when former congressman Peter Deutsch and his Ben Gamla group were met with firm resistance from Hallandale Beach citizens who opposed his zealous efforts to shoe-horn a high school into a single-family residential neighborhood, months after Deutsch first threatened them and their city officials at a public meeting in Hallandale Beach, saying quite emphatically that there was "nothing" that they or anyone else could do to prevent him from getting what he wanted, there was nothing about it in either the Herald or Sun-Sentinel?

(Deutsch's first application to the city of HB was for 200 students, but then we were told that was just a "mistake," he was really only going to have 500, yet Broward County Schools says that he can have nearly 900 anyway.
Seriously, after reading Teproff's recent story, does Peter Deutsch honestly seem like the sort of person who will not fight for every single student he can get when he's sees competitor Somerset ready to go to war and sue the City of Coral Gables?


Ben Gamla in HB would've brought in well over $2 million a year for him and his partners, before costs, but then when you force kids to eat outside for lunch, as Deutsch personally reminded everyone he would, in fact, do, when others thought that was just a joke, well, it was hard not to see this enterprise more as a license to print money, with HB as the physical warehouse, than as a sincere effort to help improve the quality and options for
Hallandale Beach students and parents.who are literally desperate to have a quality school for ALL Hallandale Beach students and residents to be proud of.

Deutsch wasn't interested in the latter, though, just the former, and continually employed
his petulant bully card. Having seen him and his over-the-top bullying ego in action in person many times, yes, we know EXACTLY what he will do!)

As for the Herald and Sun-Sentinel completely ignoring the community successfully rallying to defeat this well-known bully, or the the city's staff recommending rejection because he and his team, despite all their bluster, failed to meet the legal requirements for the zoning variance he sought,
over-and-over, and his subsequently pulling of the application... what exactly?

Again, NOTHING in print or in any of your newspaper's blogs.
Not a crumb.
It's like it never actually happened at all.

We all know that actual meaningful news happens even when your company consciously chooses to ignore it, but if you think that your ignoring it does you any favors in the future with the residents of this community, far from it.
But we get it, though.

If a tree falls in HB, the question of whether it really make a sound is moot since it's in HB, right?
But if that same tree were to fall in Pine Crest, South Beach or near Brickell, stop the presses!

Mr. Schumacher-Matos, the Herald's recent track record is quite clear that your editorial team fervently believe that Coral Gables is, inherently, VERY IMPORTANT, while Hallandale Beach and Broward County and what happens to its citizen taxpayers is, inherently, insignificant, and, at best, an annoyance, which I guess is why a Herald reporter has attended exactly one HB City Commission meeting since June of 2008, despite everything that has happened here in the interim, almost all of which has been very. very bad for its beleaguered citizen taxpayers.

And I suppose that also explains why your newspaper completely ignored the successful citizens fight against the Diplomat LAC proposal that may well turn out to be the poster child for Amendment 4 in the weeks leading up to November's election, even while giving coverage to an addition to an apt. complex in Kendall.

I perfectly understand why the affected Kendall community is upset, I really do, but why a news story on the front page of Sunday's local section about 92 units and NOT one about a development of four or five 25-30 story condo towers, a project so large that the Broward County Commission had to vote on it -twice?

Despite protest, Kendall tower OK'd
The Kendall Community Council approved a new apartment building west of the
Palmetto Expressway -- to the dismay of some residents.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/27/1702951/despite-protest-kendall-tower.html

http://eyeonmiami.blogspot.com/2010/06/downtown-kendall-plan-and-residents.html


Okay, point taken.
Actions and words, or rather the lack of them, could hardly make this point any more clear.

My fellow concerned HB and Broward residents will know better in the future than to think
that the actual news value of any particular story is based on what's actually happening (or might) and other germane news parameters, not just where it happens.
No, as The Who correctly pointed out, "we won't be fooled again."

I will be happy to post any response you make in the future.

-------
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/01/1709646/charter-school-firm-sues-city.html
Posted on Thursday, 07.01.10
CORAL GABLES

Charter-school firm sues Coral Gables

A dispute between Coral Gables and a charter-school company is headed to court.

By Carli Teproff


A charter-school company sued the city of Coral Gables on Wednesday, demanding that the city approve a new 675-student school in a residential neighborhood.

Somerset Inc., a nonprofit firm that runs charter schools in Miami-Dade and Broward, wants to open a K-8 school on the campus of University Baptist Church, off Segovia Street near the Coral Gables library.

But the site isn't zoned for a full-size school, and the city has only granted approval for 110 students -- the same number as had attended a previously approved preschool on the church grounds.

Now Somerset wants a judge to declare that the school doesn't require city zoning approval. Somerset cites a state law saying that a church can house a charter school ``under their preexisting zoning and land use designations.''

The company says this law trumps city zoning rules, and cites a 2008 Sarasota Circuit Court ruling to that effect.

Somerset wants a Miami-Dade Circuit judge to order Coral Gables to allow the school.

Marcos D. Jiménez, a lawyer for Somerset, said Wednesday that his client had done everything it is supposed to do.

``We have come to a point where we need to invoke the protection of the state statute,'' he said. ``We think it is clear and on point.''

Somerset Academy has until July 26 to show the Miami-Dade school district that it has received city approval for a charter school at the church, 624 Anastasia Ave. The School Board approved the application in November 2008, but the petition did not specify a particular site.

Charter schools charge no tuition and receive taxpayer money to operate, but are run by someone other than the county school board.

`QUALITY OF LIFE'

City Attorney Elizabeth Hernandez said she was still reviewing the complaint Wednesday evening. She said the city is trying to look out for residents' interests.

``We are going to take all the appropriate action to preserve the quality of life including that of single family residential areas,'' Hernandez said.

She added that the city simply wants Somerset to follow the same procedures as everyone else for getting a zoning change.

Neighbors have complained that a charter school would bring too much traffic to a residential street -- an issue that normally would come up when the city commission considers a zoning change.

`SURPRISED'

Tucker Gibbs, who represents The Biltmore Neighborhood Association -- a group formed to fight the school -- said Friday he was ``somewhat surprised they filed a lawsuit.''

``They requested the certificate of use for 110 students,'' he said. ``They got what they supposedly wanted. So why are they suing the city?''

Jiménez called getting the certificate of use for 110 students ``a first step.''

``We can not operate without the larger number of students,'' he said. ``It's not feasible.''

----------
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/28/1704044_new-miami-beach-charter-school.html
Posted on Monday, 06.28.10

MIAMI BEACH

New Miami Beach charter school offers classes in Hebrew

Parents interested in having their children learn Hebrew as part of their schooling attended an open house Sunday for the new Ben Gamla Charter School set to open in August.

By Paradise Afshar

For the upcoming school year Johany Preston is considering an alternative option to a traditional public school for her three boys.

She is flirting with the idea of sending them to the brand new Ben Gamla Charter School in Miami Beach, which when it opens in August will offer a combination English and Hebrew curriculum, only the third school of its kind in South Florida.

``The location and the Hebrew were the main draws,'' said Preston, 44, of North Miami, who was among two dozens parents on Sunday attending an open house at the school at 1211 Marseille Dr. It will welcome students from kindergarten through fifth grade.

Admission to the school is free and open to students residing in the Miami-Dade school district. There is a $100 refundable book deposit.

Preston, who is Jewish, said she feels that the language component is important ``because it's a part of the Jewish culture.''

The Miami Beach campus is the second for the school named after an Israelite high priest -- Yehoshua ben Gamla -- known in the Talmud for his campaign to establish yeshivas throughout Judea.

The school's language curriculum has not been without controversy. When the first Ben Gamla school opened in Hollywood in 2007, the Broward County School Board briefly ordered the charter school suspend its Hebrew classes because the language has too close of a tie to Judaism, raising concerns that the connection could result in a nonsecular school.

Nathan Katz, a religious studies professor at Florida International University, was asked by the school board to review the lesson plans to ensure it was secular and the school was allowed to offer Hebrew classes. Katz said it is within the school's constitutional rights to teach the culture that comes with the language, and that the curriculum doesn't include any religious practice.

``It's like a magnet school where you may have a choice of language like French or German,'' said Katz, who attended Sunday's open house.

Heather Rubin, a first grade teacher, said Ben Gamla students are held to the same Florida public school standards. The majority of the curriculum is taught in English.

``I don't speak Hebrew,'' Rubin said, adding that another teacher comes into the class to teach students the language. ``But I do think it's great to have to learn a second language. It's amazing to see the kids who come here who speak a second language at home, come here and learn a third language.''

But the main goal of the school is to provide a comforting learning environment, she said. Principal Ari Haddad describes the school as a hybrid between public and private schools. Haddad said the new school is being well-received.

``So far everyone has been great. I had one of the neighbors come to me today and say, `You will do great things here,' and I think we will.'' he said.

Currently, there are 930 students enrolled in the Ben Gamla Charter School in Hollywood. The new Miami Beach campus is expected to add 190 new students.

For more information about the Ben Gamla Charter School, call 305-469-9331.

----------

http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/07/1618532/charter-school-proposed-at-gables.html
Posted on Fri, May. 07, 2010

Charter school proposed at Coral Gables church meets resistance from city

BY CARLI TEPROFF
The Miami Herald

University Baptist Church in Coral Gables, pictured here on Thursday, May 6, 2010, is trying to gain approval to open a charter school on their current grounds that would serve over 600 students beginning in August of this year and has met opposition from neighbors that surround the church in the mainly residential neighborhood. Allison Diaz /

Academica, the company hoping to open a charter school at University Baptist Church, pictured here, went before the Coral Gables Development Review Committee on Friday. (Miami Herald file photo)

For Academica to open a charter school with more than 600 students at University Baptist Church, it will have to address parking, traffic and zoning concerns, Coral Gables' Development Review Committee said Friday.

Members of the city's police, fire, building and zoning, architecture, public works and parking departments queried Academica on a wide of range of issues pertaining to the proposed school at the church, 624 Anastasia Ave.

Company officials have said the pre-K through eighth grade school would open in August, although the city maintains the school needs to secure city approval before opening.

Friday's meeting was the first gathering before a city board. The company has maintained it can open the school at the church without city approval because of a state charter school law. In July, the Miami-Dade School Board approved Academica's application to open a school, dubbed Somerset Academy, although no location was specified.

City Attorney Elizabeth Hernandez has said in order to open up a school with more than 110 students -- which is what the property is zoned for -- the city would have to approve zoning and land use changes.

A group of residents who live nearby have formed a neighborhood association to prevent the charter school from opening with more than 110 students.

Attorney Tucker Gibbs, who is representing the group, said the main concern is the added traffic on the residential streets.

``The DRC brought to light a lot of issues that surround the proposal,'' Gibbs said after the meeting. ``The land use does not allow a school there.''

Academia officials have said they're aware of the neighbors' concerns and will try to work with them.

``The school certainly wants to be a good neighbor,'' said Rolando Llanes, the project's architect.

On Friday the city's Development Review Committee -- which is made up of representatives from each department -- went through the committee's concerns before a standing-room only crowd.

Among the concerns raised Friday:

The number of students. The charter calls for 675 students; the company has said the proposed school can accommodate 735 students.

The committee said the company needs to clarify the exact number of students who will attend the school.

Coral Gables Police Sgt. Jesse Medina cited added traffic at dismissal time.

Llanes said the plan was to have three dismissal times, 30 minutes apart, to help ease traffic. He noted a maximum of 31 cars could be in the pick-up and drop-off lanes.

``The responsibility will be on the parents,'' Llanes said.

Parking. Currently, there are 93 spaces used by the church and its preschool, whose enrollment is capped at 110 students and 18 staff members, as per a 1977 commission mandate.

``One of my main concerns is parking,'' said Sebrina Brown, the city's currency administrator.

The architectural firm working with Academia -- Civica Architects -- said there was ample parking. In a packet submitted to the city, the firm said 58 spaces would be required for a 735-student school. It based that calculation on a state school code requiring one space per staff and one visitor space for every 100 students. That is the minimum parking requirement.

Using that methodology, the firm said it needed 58 spaces, 35 more than UBC now has with its 93 parking spaces.

``We have surplus of parking,'' Llanes said.

Jeanne Ann Rigl, who lives close to the church, came to Friday's meeting to speak to the committee.

While the committee meeting was open to the public, community members could not speak because it was not an open forum.

``We were disappointed no one could speak,'' Rigl said.

The company said it will work with the DRC.

Meanwhile, more than 900 parents have written letters of interest to the school, school officials said, and a parent board has been formed. The company operates several other charter schools in South Florida under the name of Somerset Academy.

Gina Delarosa, who lives in the Gables and has two sons, said she came to the meeting to hear more about the school. She said the city would benefit from a charter school.

``I feel like it's going to be a long process,'' she said.

Coral Gables City Hall, 405 Biltmore Way, 33134

Friday, November 27, 2009

Hollywood and Hallandale Beach parents aren't feeling love for Notter and Broward Schools; Where's Bob Butterworth?

My comments follow the article.

------------------

South Florida Sun-Sentinel
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/schools/fl-school-consolidation-20091126,0,2973432.story

Broward school merger proposal upsets parents, officials in east

By Akilah Johnson and Jennifer Gollan, Sun Sentinel

November 26, 2009

Faced with the possibility that their underenrolled schools may be merged, some parents and officials in the eastern part of the county are warning the Broward School District to tread lightly.

There could be a minor rebellion among students upset over being moved, said Thomas Douglas, president of the Parent Teacher Student Association at Boyd Anderson High School in Lauderdale Lakes.

"There can be some separation anxiety and the implications are some of these young people will decide that it is not even worth attending school," he said. "It is basically a no-win situation."

The district projects as many as 33,000 empty desks in the 2013-14 school year, most in the eastern part of the county. As long as there are empty seats, the state won't allow the district to add classrooms or build new schools in the crowded west.

In response, the district is pushing a plan to measure classroom space by using eight geographic regions rather than individuals schools. The county and its cities must agree to the change. So far, Davie, Dania Beach and Cooper City voted to approve the measure. Lauderdale Lakes and Pompano Beach voted against it.

But that plan doesn't address underenrolled schools, and schools Superintendent James Notter is proposing that some elementary schools be consolidated, others could morph into kindergarten through eighth-grade schools or unused wings may be converted into office space for district administrators.

Notter explained that the district's leases on office space in Sunrise and Fort Lauderdale will soon expire and consolidating some underenrolled campuses helps with both money and boundary issues.

In the coming year, only Pioneer Middle School in Cooper City is scheduled to see significant boundary changes but district maps show scenarios in which thousands of students are moved out of overcrowded western schools into less-crowded schools starting in the 2011-2012 school year.

Hollywood Commissioner Richard Blattner said Notter's recommendation is reasonable. "If it means that older schools are closed and it reduces expenses that taxpayers have, it should be done," he said.

But Kristina Brazil, whose children attend Plantation Middle School, questions its merits.

"So…we move these kids out and put [administrators] in and it's a win, win?" she said. "The stance has been 'what's the most important thing for kids?' That doesn't sound like that's what they're doing."

Notter and School Board Chairwoman Jennifer Gottlieb stressed the board has not approved anything yet.

"There are too many unanswered questions," Gottlieb said this week. "We need to know where the kids are going to go; the impact on communities."

Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper said the proposal to change how class space is measured benefits western communities and the district, which won't have to anger parents by changing boundaries. It does little to address the needs of communities with underenrolled schools, she said.

"If there is crowding in one place in the county and the mechanism is in place to fill those seats through boundary changes, I cannot sit idly by because of the lack of will," Cooper said. "Other cities, particularly those in eastern communities…should be concerned."

Longtime Pompano Beach community activist Ernestine Price vowed to rally against any proposal that might mean eastern schools will close. Price helped found the grassroots group that sued the district in 1995 for neglecting to provide older schools in eastern Broward with the same facilities, programs and quality teachers as newer schools out west.

The thought of consolidating underenrolled schools leaves her resentful and heartbroken, she said. But, it compels her to keep advocating against disparities.

"You have a Broward County School District, and when schools were being opened out west they bused these kids," she fumed. "And now the schools are overcrowded and they don't want to bus anyone to the east. I don't know how anybody can fix their mouth and say that."

Parents and officials in western cities fear that if the proposed change doesn't pass, thousands of students countywide will be moved in a domino effect.

Cooper City Mayor Debby Eisinger has been avid supporter of the proposal and said the intent was never to sacrifice some schools for the benefit of others. The resolution, she acknowledged, may need to be modified to include "some protection for underenrolled schools."

"It should not be an east/west fight," she said. "Let's work together to continue to provide a quality public school education for the children throughout Broward County."

Reader comments at:
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/schools/fl-school-consolidation-20091126,0,3841345,comment-display-all.story

-----------
Seventy per cent of this article from yesterday is the
same as the Sun-Sentinel article from Saturday
that I sent many of you.

Since I returned to South Florida in mid-October of
2003,
Mayor Cooper and the Hallandale Beach City
Commission have
never held a single city-wide forum
on the sad state of education in this city,
nor has she
has a single meeting of the City Commission
that dealt
with it in a serious way.

And in the year since she was elected, we know that

Cooper has also never asked our MIA School Board
member Ann Murray to speak at any city function
to explain what, if anything, she's doing.

Why not?


And lest you forget, Hallandale High School also
serves kids from Hollywood,
whose parents surely
must wonder what it takes for HB City Hall to get
off their butt and actually get more involved in changing
the mix of options for kids in the HB/Hollywood area.


To say nothing of the new residents of Hallandale
Beach with kids who are now moving into
developments
on A1A like The Beach Club.
Who exactly is looking after their best interests?

People who make the sort of financial investment in
a
place like they have will simply not accept half-assed
explanations from elected officials like Cooper and
Murray for why schools are so bad in the area,
and why they seem to have been mere spectators
while it all happened.


So when is
Mayor Cooper and the HB City
Commission going to convene a city-wide meeting
on the state of education in this area, one with

Ann Murray
present and accounted for,
so that people can have their legitimate concerns

aired and maybe even addressed?

A few months ago, showing what happens when
you have a person in charge who keeps their eyes
and ears open and responds in a constructive and
forthright fashion,
Mayor Bober and the Hollywood
City Commission had an interesting meeting that
discussed the pluses and minuses of the city pursuing
an application for a city-run Charter school.


It was very informative and anyone who had an
opinion on the proposal or schools in Hollywood
or Broward in general, got their chance to put in
their two cents and sound-off.


Why is that SO difficult to replicate here in
Hallandale Beach?

Not the Charter School part, simply having the
public meeting?


To me, the one thing that became really apparent
as one parent after another spoke was the full extent
to which the Middle Schools are perceived as a
huge problem for the greater area.


Parents and citizens are
VERY disturbed at what
they see and what they hear, and their perceptions
that mediocrity and sub-standard performance is
becoming the accepted norm, no matter what the
Broward School Board and Supt. Notter insists.

There was much discussion of the negative effect
of the Middle Schools in this area on attracting
families to the area, with many Realtors -
and
'amateur' real estate experts
- speaking to
the fact that they knew or had met people who
had decided to locate elsewhere.


It was also mentioned that as much as people
may prefer not to acknowledge it, many people
already living here were contemplating moving
elsewhere for the very same reasons.


Blame the reality or blame the perception,
but in the end, it's all the same thing if everyone
thinks it's bad.


Again, to repeat myself, since I returned to South
Florida six years ago from Arlington County, VA,
a place that is, if anything, perhaps, a little
TOO
concerned with education, the city has never held
a single meeting on education.


One that, in my opinion, optimally, ought to be held
on a Saturday morning over at the HB Cultural Center
starting around 10:30 a.m., so that kids can be there,
too, with at least one parent or guardian.

You simply won't get the same kind of turnout if you

hold it at night, and we all know that, so how about
some common sense coming into play for a change?

And maybe, for once, the city actually putting up
legible signs advertising
the meeting at least ten days
in advance
in appropriate places
throughout the city,
including near schools, rather than
the typical way
that
everything gets done here:
half-assed.

Just wondering: when are we going to get our chance
to speak to the hydra-headed PR squad selected
by
Supt. Notter to reassure Broward taxpayers
and
parents that the whole Broward School Board
shouldn't just be blindfolded and tossed overboard?

Or as Michael Mayo wrote in his interesting
Nov. 1st Sun-Sentinel column about FP&L
and
Notter both turning to Bob Butterworth
to lend some assistance,
In Sticky Situations, Just Add Mr. Butterworth
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sfl-butterworth-mayocol-b103009,0,2880202.column
a "
volunteer three-member panel to explore
the school district's recent troubles."


Since Mayo's column ran three-and-a-half weeks
ago,
have you read or seen even one article or
segment on
local TV about actual Broward citizens
getting a chance
to speak to them, in either private
or public?


I haven't, and I've been actively looking for news
stories spelling out what they were actually doing.

There's been nothing reported for over three weeks
in either
the Herald or Sun-Sentinel in the form of
an actual article, and my recollection was
that they
were only going to be in operation for 90 days
or so.
What gives?

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Some things to consider re Tuesday afternoon's meeting in Hollywood re city-run Charter School

Monday June 15th, 2009

Below is the Sun-Sentinel's first and only mention, thus far,
of Mayor Bober's city-run charter school proposal, and to
call the article Lite is an understatement.

Just off the top of my head, you'll notice that there is no
mention of how many city-chartered schools there currently
are in Florida and Broward County, how many have succeeded
and how many have fallen by the wayside and the particular
reasons why, nor are there any references to what if any lessons
were learned from the failed city-run charters, and whether parents
of students at those schools blamed the city's elected leadership
and administrators for the failure, the teachers, or their own kids
lack of hard work and achievement.

That sort of info would've been nice to see in a Sunday preview
story, along with a graph or a chart.
Maybe next Sunday.

I'd already done some research a few weeks ago on the sad sack
state of schools in SE Broward that I was going to post on my
blog in relation to Ben Gamla's application in Hallandale Beach.
I'll still be doing that post relatively soon. but until then, please
take a look at one particular measurement that I was planning
on using in that post, one that the State of Florida keeps track
of as a way of comparing and contrasting schools throughout
the state: percentage of students who were absent 21 days
or more.

(I'm not a good measuring stick for school absences, since
I'm quite atypical: the first time I missed a day of school came
in 10th grade, in 1976, and that was because I was doing
advance work/media for a Carter-Mondale campaign event
on South Beach, with both Carter and Mondale there, along
with all of South Florida's leading pols and celebs of the time.)

When you compare the numbers for local SE Broward schools
to some of the very best-performing high schools throughout
South Florida, new and old, traditional and charter, as well as
to average ones, the inference is pretty clear, though inference
is not the same as a direct correlation, of course.

Still, to paraphrase one of Woody Allen's most well-known
maxims, one of the best predictors of collective success for
a high school is the percentage of truly motivated kids who
show up everyday, and who aren't looking for excuses not
to show-up.

It should hardly be surprising that, in most cases, schools
with high degrees of chronic absenteeism are either exceedingly
average or below-average in precisely the sort of important
intangibles that you'd expect.
Guess who has a lot of those?!

re 2007-08 school year, Absent 21+ Days or more,per FDOE


Name # Absent 21+ Days % of total school students

Hallandale High School 404 students 23.4% of school
Hollywood Hills High School 682 students 29.5% of school
McArthur High School 743 students 28.4% of school
South Broward High School 606 students 25.0% of school

For comparison purposes:

City of Pembroke Pines Charter High School 9.7%
Coral Gables High School 10.9%
Dr. Michael M. Krop High School 7.5%
Flanagan High School 21.9%
Miami Killian High School 4.5%
Miami Norland High School 20.3%
Miami Palmetto High School 9.0%
Miami Beach High School 8.5%
North Miami High School 9.5%
North Miami Beach High School 5.3%

Yes, those numbers tell a very compelling story, don't they?

And where exactly are the Broward counterparts to the very
successful and popular Design & Architecture Charter or
MAST Academy schools in Miami-Dade?
They don't exist.

In fact, that would be a very good question to ask our local
School Board member, Ann Murray, the next time you see
her around the area, and she asks you to re-elect her next year,

Where, exactly, are the dynamic intangibles that Murray said
she'd add to shake-up the ostrich-like Broward County School
Board?
Personally, I haven't seen them yet since she got elected last year,
and I don't think I'm alone in that sentiment, based on numerous
conversations I've had with other voters,
In fact, you might want to even remind her that her School Board
hall pass is just a temporary one, unless she starts making good
on her promises of reform, cost-controls and accountability,

Though I was no fan of Frank Till, to say the least, read this
recent Bob Norman post on the Broward School Board and
be sure to read the well-informed comments of readers,
some of which concern schools in our area:


There's one more thing that I wanted to share with you
about education innovation and it's something I've noticed
about the education debate in this country for a very long time,
almost starting from the time I was dating the daughter of the
Chair of the School of Education at IU.
And it continued to be something I noticed later while I lived in
upscale Evanston and Wilmette, Illinois and then in Arlington
County, VA.
All were water-front communities full of well-educated, well-informed
dual-income parents that took education issues VERY seriously,
and, not surprisingly, were home to some of THE best public
high schools in the entire country.

While living in Northern Virginia and working in Washington, D.C.
I had lots of close friends who were VERY involved in all manner
of issues surrounding K-12 and higher education and the social
issues they intersected with, whether on Capitol Hill as staffers,
at law firm or education groups on K Street or Mass. Avenue
as lobbyists, plus those at trade groups as reps of schools or
The College Board and the AAUP.

(One was one of my closest friends, who, along with me
and another friend at The National Geographic HQ,
controlled four Oriole 19-game mini-season tickets,
not far from the press box at Camden Yards.)

Trust me, I knew from countless conversations with my friends
and from being on Capitol Hill myself, the names and pet causes
of the entire House Education Committee, and if there is
more useless trivia than that stuck in my head now,
I don't know what that could be ...
My friends knew where the bodies were buried, and followed
these folks closer than you can possibly imagine, since
-shocker!- there is lots of money to be made in education
funding and knowing where loyalties lie.

So for all those reasons, more than most people, I am used
to reading and hearing (and cringing when) people opposed
to either innovation, greater public accountability or charter
schools, or all three, talk about how charter schools were
"taking money away" from public schools and their students.

No, actually, it's parents voting with their feet and their
heads and taking their own tax dollars with them.
The money doesn't belong to the school, though a lot of
apologists in South Florida for the current system act like it does.
Keep that in mind when you read the reader comments to the
Sun-Sentinel article below, as that distinction is completely
lost on many of them.

Don't make the same mistake they do.

The City of Hollywood's staff summary of the city-run charter
school meeting is at:

And remember, if you can't make it, or to the 7 p,m, meeting
later on the future of Johnson Street,
you can watch the city's webcast,

--------------------

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Hollywood considering opening its own charter school

Idea will be floated at workshop Tuesday

By Ihosvani Rodriguez

June 14, 2009

HOLLYWOOD

City officials will host a workshop Tuesday to float the idea of opening a city-run charter school.

Mayor Peter Bober said he wants to gauge public opinion before proceeding.

"I've always said that education is the missing puzzle in the city," said Bober. "Hollywood has some excellent schools, but the perception that Hollywood's schools are sub-par is an unfortunate reality, which confronts us each day and causes young families to move out of Hollywood, and causes families looking to relocate to go elsewhere."

The workshop is scheduled for 4 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 2600 Hollywood Blvd. Among the speakers will be Pembroke Pines City Manager Charlie Dodge, whose city operates the largest city-run charter school system in the country. Charter schools are privately run public educational facilties.

The charter high school, two middle schools and four elementary schools in Pembroke Pines serve 5,400 students.

But that city is struggling to keep the system open because of funding problems.

In November 2007, Pembroke Pines filed a lawsuit alleging the Broward school district owed the charters at least $2.5 million a year in capital projects money. The suit is pending.

Ihosvani Rodriguez can be reached at ijrodriguez@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7908.

Copyright © 2009, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Readers comments at:

http://www.topix.net/forum/source/south-florida-sun-sentinel/T4DGGBS0U3NFIVT42

-----------

City of Hollywood, Florida

Office of the City Manager

PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 15, 2009

Contact: Raelin Storey

Public Affairs and Marketing Director

Phone: 954.921.3098 Fax: 954.921.3314

E-mail: rstorey@hollywoodfl.org


Special City Commission Meeting to Explore

A City-Run Charter School


HOLLYWOOD, FL The City of Hollywood will hold a Special City Commission Meeting on Tuesday, June 16, 2009 at 4:00 p.m. in the City Commission Chambers at City Hall, 2600 Hollywood Boulevard, to discuss whether the City should move forward with seeking a Charter from the Broward County School Board to operate a city-run charter school.

“When I was sworn in as Mayor, I vowed to make education a top priority,” says Hollywood Mayor Peter Bober. While Hollywood has some excellent schools, there is a perception that the educational opportunities in Hollywood are sub-par. A Charter School could be one step toward offering more options for families and changing outdated perceptions.” The meeting will include information from City of Hollywood Staff along with the City Manager of Pembroke Pines, Charlie Dodge, about Charter School programs. Additionally, the public will have an opportunity to comment on whether the City of Hollywood should apply for a charter.

For additional information or media inquiries, please contact Raelin Storey, Public Affairs Director at (o) 954.921.3098 or (c) 954.812.0975.

Just some things to think about in anticipation of the Tuesday
afternoon Hollywood City Commission meeting on consideration
of a City of Hollywood-run charter school, modeled on the very
successful one in Pembroke Pines.

Michael Putney's live report from the school on Friday, and
Charter Schools USA's Jon Hage's remarks are here:

Crist visits local charter school
Gov. Charlie Crist visited a North Lauderdale charter school
on Friday morning to sign into law a new bill promoting school
improvement and accountability.

Governor Crist's statement is here http://www.flgov.com/release/10829

------------------------------------

http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedpolitics/2009/06/crist-visits-broward-to-sign-education-bill.html

Crist visits Broward to sign education bill

-------------------------------

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/southflorida/story/1095087.html

At Broward academy, Crist again celebrates school-ratings law

BY PATRICIA MAZZEI
pmazzei@MiamiHerald.com

June 13, 2009

He may have quietly signed a bill that changes the way Florida schools are rated earlier this week, but that didn't stop Gov. Charlie Crist from inking his name on the law again at a ceremony in a North Lauderdale charter school Friday.

Crist visited the North Broward Academy of Excellence, a K-8, to tout House Bill 991, which expands to all Florida schools a pilot program that combined the state's method of grading schools with the rating system under the federal No Child Left Behind law.

Classes have been out since last week, but the school invited some students and their parents to the ceremony.

About 16 students, clad in their school uniforms, surrounded Crist and offered him blue Sharpie pens to sign the bill -- and autograph their name tags.

''I'm going to run out of pens,'' Crist joked.

''You have to buy new ones,'' suggested 6-year-old Miles Fleisher, a soon-to-be first-grader, to much laughter.

All public and charter schools already receive grades. But the No Child measure only rates schools that get federal money because they have a high percentage of low-income students.

Last year, Florida got permission from the U.S. Department of Education to mesh the two methods.

The new bill puts that change into law. Schools will continue to get a grade -- as well as a breakdown of how well students in different categories of race, disability and poverty are performing in math and reading like the No Child law already does for some schools.

Supporters say that will help schools identify struggling students in high-performing schools. Critics counter that the measure comes with no new money for schools to do something with the extra data.

On Friday, bill sponsor Rep. Tom Grady, a Naples Republican, said the hybrid rating system is in line with President Barack Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan's push for more transparency in schools.

''This bill walks that talk,'' he said.

When the state first brought the state and federal rating methods together last year, it significantly reduced the number of schools that would have otherwise faced serious sanctions -- like closing or turning them into charter or special district-run schools -- for repeatedly failing to meet federal standards.

Expanding the system to all schools might mean a greater number may face drastic consequences. Crist said it could also mean more students moving into charter schools or more schools giving that model a try.

''It gives more schools the opportunity . . . to become a charter school,'' he said.

Thirteen Florida schools risked sanctions this school year under the pilot hybrid rating system, including four in Miami-Dade: Miami Central Senior High, Miami Edison Senior High, Liberty City Elementary and Holmes Elementary. A fifth, Larkdale Elementary, is in Broward.

None will officially know if they skirted sanctions until school grades are released this summer; some have already celebrated significant gains in student test scores.

----------------------

For more stories on educational innovation across the country,

see Education Sector Biweekly Digest, which is a DC-based

newsletter that I've been receiving via email since it first started,

http://www.educationsector.org/ and the LA Times Education

webpage, http://www.latimes.com/news/education/

---------------------
Los Angeles Times


Spitting in the eye of mainstream education

Three no-frills charter schools in Oakland mock liberal orthodoxy, teach strictly to the test -- and produce some of the state's top scores.
By Mitchell Landsberg
May 31, 2009

----------------------

Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinionla/la-ed-teachers15-2009jun15,0,4612975.story

From the Los Angeles Times

Editorial

Paying for bad teachers


California has long put an outmoded notion of teacher protection over the interests of students. Now that practice may cost the state some federal money.

June 15, 2009

They put it off. They debated it at length and watered it down. And in the end, the Los Angeles Unified school trustees barely passed a
resolution asking the Legislature to make it a little easier to fire teachers accused of serious crimes. Mind you, not the ineffective teachers who sleep in the classroom, ignore the curriculum and pass their unprepared students to the next grade. Just the ones who stand accused of abusing or molesting students.

Union leaders warn that the Legislature will never comply without their stamp of approval, and they're probably right. Failure to put the interests of children over the power of unions is characteristic of California education policy.

It also puts the state out of touch with education reforms sweeping the nation, and could put our schools out of contention for new pots of federal money. Just two days after the resolution squeaked through last week, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan made it clear that antiquated notions of teacher protection will not pass muster with the Obama administration. Teachers should be evaluated, retained and paid based on how well their students learn, Duncan said, and that includes progress on standardized tests.

California couldn't do that if it wanted to right now. At the behest of unions, the state put a
firewall between student data and teacher performance. The data "may not be used ... for purposes of pay, promotion, sanction or personnel evaluation," the law reads. Duncan has $4.3 billion in competitive grant money to parcel out to schools that meet his standards for innovation, and California's perverse position on teacher pay and firing isn't likely to make the grade. But Duncan has a role to play in making that more feasible. The kinds of data called for by the No Child Left Behind Act don't measure individual student progress. The federal law has long needed revision to emphasize yearly growth rather than meeting an arbitrary, inconsistent bar called "proficiency."

We agree with union leaders that teachers need decent job protection and that they should not be judged by test results alone. But a recent
study by the New Teacher Project, a training organization in New York, found that in many schools where teachers agreed that a colleague should be fired for poor performance, no one was even given an "unsatisfactory" rating on evaluations. Some objective measures are necessary.

We are so far from that in California. Here, it is considered revolutionary for a school board to beg for relief from a tortuous, money-wasting teacher termination process that is nearly doomed to failure anyway. Duncan has given the state a new reason to act on behalf of children, an incentive it shouldn't need in the first place.

Readers comments at:

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-edw-teachers15-2009jun15-gb,0,1706402.graffitiboard