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Milwaukee's Daily Magazine for Wednesday, May 23, 2012

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In Kids & Family

School board members Meagan Holman and Dave Voeltner and Ald. Jim Bohl meet with community members about a proposed merger of two MPS schools on Tuesday.

Competing plans for 68th Street School program head to the board


Since the Milwaukee Board of School Directors gave MPS superintendent Dr. Gregory Thornton an extra month to work out a relocation site for the early childhood education program at 68th Street School, which the board voted in December to close at the end of this school year, community activists have been busy working on a plan of their own.

However, after a number of meetings, preparing a 47-page proposal to merge 68th Street's program into nearby 81st Street School, going door to door in three neighborhoods that surround the two schools, the community members are concerned that the plan isn't even being considered by MPS administration, which now has a pitch to make, too.

The district proposal is on the agenda of next week's full board meeting and it seems likely the community proposal will come up in that discussion. The ball is now firmly in the board's court.

But frustration has apparently been bubbling to the surface over recent weeks as community members and 68th Street School staffers have felt that they are not being taken seriously by district officials.

At a public meeting on Tuesday night at the Enderis Park Fieldhouse, attended by school board directors Jeff Spence, Meagan Holman and Dave Voeltner – as well as Ald. Jim Bohl – organizers said they feel that MPS regional executive specialist Keith Posley – who oversees the region that includes both schools and who is meant to be the community's access point to Dr. Thornton – has been shutting them out.

"We need the administration to be better listeners," community member Elisabeth Witt told the board members in attendance at that meeting. "We have been getting a whole lot of no from them. This is what we – all of us – want. I feel like they need to start listening instead of dictating."

Spence, the board member whose district includes the neighborhoods – Cooper Park, Enderis Park, Lenox Heights and Kops Park – and both schools discussed in the proposal, nodded, and said, "Agreed. I agree with you."

On Thursday morning, Posley visited 68th Street School to meet with staffers and community organizers and informed them the administration would move forward with a plan to permanently move the 68th Street School program to Kluge School, four miles to the north.

Posley also told them that any plan for turning 81st Street School into a neighborhood school (as the community proposal suggests) would be considered separately, echoing a statement by Spence at Tuesday's meeting that the plans for the two schools are viewed by MPS as unrelated discussions.

"We just received the proposal this morning," said MPS spokesman Tony Tagliavia in an email Thursday evening. Wednesday was the deadline for getting an item on the agenda for next week's meeting.

"We're always happy to hear from families and their thoughts about the future of Milwaukee Public Schools. We certainly will review the plan. The new plan was presented to us (Thursday) morning. The Kluge plan was put into the process for board consideration (on Wednesday).

"Keith (Posley) is planning on meeting again with parents at 68th Street regarding the new plan," Tagliavia added. "Ultimately, decisions like these are up to the Board of School Directors."

Tagliavia said that the administration's Kluge proposal emerged from "extensive review by administration and consideration of no fewer than eight alternative scenarios." He did not elaborate on the nature of those scenarios nor whether or not a merger with 81st Street School was among them.

One of the sticky issues in the proposed merger is that it includes moving three grade levels – sixth, seventh and eighth grade – out of 81st Street School to create capacity for the incoming 68th Street School program. The plan would transform a K-8 school into a K3-5 program.

The district currently receives no state funding for K3 students.

Bohl, who represents the Cooper Park and Kops Park neighborhoods, and Ald. Michael Murphy, whose district includes Enderis Park and Lenox Heights, have written letters of support that form part the community proposal that was created with the assistance and support of the neighborhood associations in Lenox Heights, Enderis East, Enderis Park and Cooper Park.

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