NOTE: This is a copy of my column that ran in the Detroit News on Feb. 19, 2013. Interestingly enough I submitted this same column to the Detroit Free Press where I thought it would have had a better chance of being published because of the Freep's long history of leaning more toward the Democrat/moderate liberal side of the aisle. I guess those days are long gone.
February 19, 2013 at 1:00 am
Telford: Bring the feds into Detroit schools
By John Telford
Telford alleges that Roy Roberts, emergency financial manager for DPS, has undermined him.
On Feb. 7, I met with U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education Tony Miller to debrief him on how the 1999 state takeover of Detroit Public Schools in the name of "reform" not only has been an abject failure but was unfair at the outset and remains unfair now, since DPS enjoyed a $93 million surplus and its MEAP scores were then at the state midpoint.
This contrasts starkly with its $327 million deficit at the time of Emergency Financial Manager Robert Bobb's 2011 departure, when its scores were the nation's worst. At my request and that of other community petitioners, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder's office will investigate injustices perpetrated upon DPS, including taking a look into our Legislature's passing and our governor's signing the unconstitutional replacement emergency manager law. Its predecessor spawned the so-called Educational Achievement Authority in Detroit, to which current EFM Roy Roberts gave away 15 schools.
The Michigan Supreme Court may yet overturn the new emergency manager law the Legislature passed in contempt of the citizens' vote to repeal the old one, or else rule that DPS should be exempted from it.
DPS' still-abysmal test scores are up considerably this year, and I have a plan to balance our budget within five years. Of course, scores would have risen more had hundreds of our best teachers not been released based on bogus evaluations. I'll need to recall as many as I can if I gain the authority to do so.
In the meantime, I have tried to adhere to Wayne County Circuit Court Judge John Murphy's order to collaborate with Roberts in administering the school district, which is governed by the old Public Act 72 that a partisan appeals court judge resurrected. In his Aug. 8 order, Judge Murphy put me in charge of academics and the EFM in charge of finance.
That ruling remains in force, but Roberts has been unwilling to obey it.
Tomorrow we will be back in Circuit Court with Judge Annette Berry. We expect Judge Berry to specify the departments the EFM supervises and those that I do, along with her advisement to Roberts regarding the consequences if he continues to try to retain illegal authority over academic departments or decisions through March.
I have found it hard to cooperate with an EFM who won't collaborate. On Jan. 9, Roberts wrote a letter to me and board president LaMar Lemmons which he circulated to the media and to all DPS staff declaring his intent to rescind the board's move to appoint five volunteer administrative staff members to report to me — staff the board also moved to ultimately pay, assuming that Judge Berry grants it this power. These board appointments were to be synchronized with a reduction of DPS' central-office administration, which I crafted a board-anointed plan to downsize.
In authorizing new staff, the board meant to counter the EFM's directive to top academic administrators to ignore any order from me that he doesn't approve.
On Jan. 24, Roberts and I had hammered out a compromise to enable two of these staff, the ombudsmen, to continue to function pro bono to benefit the children. The next day he reneged on that compromise.
I remain open to renegotiating that and other issues. But because Roberts has continued to defy the judge's ruling, and because Lansing has reinstated legislation the voters rejected, our most salient option now is to bring in the feds.
They must come with a vengeance to address the unwarranted state takeover and save our children.
John Telford is interim superintendent of Detroit Public Schools.
Showing posts with label Detroit Public Schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Public Schools. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
DPS leaders still battling at this late date
NOTE: This is a reprint of my editorial that ran in the Detroit News.
January 16, 2013 at 10:05 am
Telford: At this late stage, Detroit schools' leaders are still in conflict
By John Telford
State-appointed Roy Roberts has control of DPS’ shaky finances. (Clarence Tabb Jr. / The Detroit News)
For many months now, in my board-appointed capacity as interim superintendent of the Detroit Public Schools, I've been working hard to follow a judge's order to collaborate with Emergency Financial Manager Roy Roberts in administering the school district.
Specifically, the judge put me in charge of the academic side of the house and Roberts in charge of the financial side.
Many times, though, I have found it to be extremely difficult to collaborate with an EFM who has continued to regard himself as the supreme — and indeed often the sole — ruler of DPS.
Case in point: On Jan. 9, Roberts wrote a letter to me and DPS board president LaMar Lemmons, which he released to The Detroit News and to all DPS staff, protesting the board's move to appoint five top pro bono administrative staff members to report to me, and to pay them as soon as a judge grants it the power to do so.
The board did this in keeping with a cost-effective reduction of DPS' bloated central-office administration which I had proposed, and also to counter the EFM's directive to top academic administrators already in place to ignore any order from me that he didn't approve.
In his letter, Roberts announced his prompt intent to rescind my volunteer staff's security clearances and to have DPS police escort them from the premises of any DPS property.
On Jan. 10, this newspaper printed part of my response to the EFM's letter. Here's an excerpt: "I think that rather than petulantly threaten to evict my volunteer staff from the premises of a public facility, you need to sit down with board president LaMar Lemmons and reason together like grownups."
Roberts didn't like this response to his letter, and he wrote a response to my response to which I have now duly responded in turn. It would appear that we will continue in this vein as pen pals for some time, but I won't bore readers further with the contents of these contentious missives.
The five currently banished staff members are my prospective chief of staff, Sherry Gay-Dagnogo (a recent candidate for the Legislature), Chief Information Officer Keith Owens (a former editor of the Michigan Chronicle and recent CIO for the Wayne County Treasurer), and former DPS principals Wesley Ganson (senior adjutant), Bob Thomas and Claude Tiller (ombudsmen).
For the past several months, Thomas and Tiller have been doing yeoman, and pro bono, work in the schools. They have mediated and resolved potentially explosive situations, which deputy superintendent Karen Ridgeway or I would have had to deal with. Before they arrived I had responded to literally hundreds of parent and teacher concerns, as had Ridgeway.
The lunatic pace I was keeping probably contributed to my Oct. 4 heart attack.
We Detroiters believed that when we overwhelmingly voted with the rest of the state to repeal the hated emergency manager law on Nov. 6, the war to save the Detroit Public Schools was won. Not yet so — the governor has now approved near-duplicate legislation in unconstitutional contempt for the voters' wishes, even though the new EFM law is advertised as being different from the old law.
One might call a rat a raccoon, but it remains a rat.
If unchallenged, this new law will restore dictatorial power to the EFM, who will then again become an appointee in charge of DPS, and will strip me of my board-designated powers as interim superintendent.
This poses a clear and present endangerment to our now increasingly tenuous democracy. I trust that President Barack Obama and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder are listening.
John Telford is intermediate superintendent of Detroit Public Schools.
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