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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.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Give DPS leadership its chance to fix district

John Telford: Give DPS leadership its chance to fix district

January 12, 2013  |  
 
John Telford
John Telford
By John Telford

Detroit Free Press guest writer
When the state took over Detroit Public Schools in 1999, the school district had a $93-million surplus and test scores that were improving. No other school district was taken over except DPS in 1999, so why us?

Unfortunately for DPS at that time, Detroit voters had also recently approved $1.5 billion in millage bonds to build new schools and renovate existing ones. I believe this bond money drew the attention of outside corporate interests with connections to Lansing legislators, and they cast hungry eyes on the many lucrative contracts to be let.

By the time of his departure as emergency financial manager, Robert Bobb put the school district $327 million in debt via reckless spending, blatant cronyism and a sell-off of the school district's valuable assets. Enter Roy Roberts, Gov. Rick Snyder's appointed emergency financial manager, who set about further dismantling DPS by jettisoning our students into charter schools and promptly leasing 15 of the district's lowest-performing schools to a new and untried state district euphemistically titled the Educational Achievement Authority.

Instead, Roberts should have kept those schools in the DPS fold and legally reconstituted their principals and faculties, but he held a dual leadership affiliation with the EAA and DPS, which amounted to an egregious conflict of interest.

Now a full 14 years after the failed takeover, DPS finally has a good elected board and knowledgeable president in the person of LaMar Lemmons and a capable interim superintendent. But Gov. Snyder has just signed into law a piece of legislation that unconstitutionally duplicates the hated Emergency Manager Law that Michigan citizens voted to repeal on Nov. 6. The slight changes in the new law are merely virtual.

In the case of the school district, unlike with the case of the City of Detroit, the fault for DPS' sorry plight lies with the state, rather than with the good DPS leadership that was in place prior to 1999. But now the schools have been innocently caught in the emergent whirlpool that is taking down the entire municipality.

On Aug. 10, a column by Free Press editorial page editor Stephen Henderson opined that Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette should desist from trying to disenfranchise Detroit voters retroactively by using a technicality to manufacture a scheme to invalidate the election of Detroit School Board members on the pretext that the district has lost population.

Rather than force the DPS board back into court to seek judicial rectification and justice for Detroit's schoolchildren, Gov. Snyder now has a rare opportunity to make a truly statesmanlike move: Turn the Detroit Public Schools system entirely back to its elected Board of Education and give me and the board a chance to put our own academic and financial houses in order without the undeserved and dictatorial interference of an emergency manager.

John Telford is interim superintendent of Detroit Public Schools.

Friday, January 11, 2013