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Education Nation comes to Philly just in time for budget crisis, layoffs

by Dale Mezzacappa on Jun 06 2011 Posted in Latest news

NBC NewsEducation Nation couldn’t have picked a better – or worse – time to arrive in Philadelphia for a week of special events and coverage meant to draw attention to what is needed for improved academic achievement for all students.

The week-long focus on education by NBC News and NBC-10, which started Sunday, includes a Teacher Town Hall, interviews of local education figures by big-name TV stars, extended TV pieces about new initiatives and a flashy exhibition on the lawn of the National Constitution Center.

It is all impressive, but it exists in a parallel universe while the messy business of urban school reform goes on around it. For starters:

Sunday afternoon, Superintendent Arlene Ackerman and Philadelphia Federation of Teachers President Jerry Jordan sat just two seats apart at the Education Nation kickoff event, a Teacher Town Hall moderated by the TODAY Show’s Ann Curry meant to hear teacher voices and extol their value in assuring quality education.

Jordan said afterward that he finds the whole thing quite ironic. As the huge Education Nation Experience exhibition opens to the public, and national media stars like Chris Matthews and Andrea Mitchell prepare to interview Ackerman and others, principals all over the city will be handing out pink slips.

Jordan said it’s never happened before in his memory that principals were given this task, instead of it happening through Human Resources. And he said he’s been told that the principals have been instructed to do it as late in the day as possible.

“For some people it’s going to be quite emotional,” he said. “Teachers have been calling me up saying they can’t sleep.” And the District is still seeking to reopen the teachers’ contract in an effort to find more savings, something Jordan said he will not do.

Monday, as the letters were being distributed in schools, Jordan announced that the PFT is filing a suit against the District over layoffs. Common Pleas Court Judge Idee C. Fox granted the injunction and a hearing is scheduled for June 14.

"The layoffs are not being done by seniority, which is what the contract requires," said PFT attorney Ralph Teti.

He said that teachers in Ackerman's turnaround Promise Academies are being exempted, which had never been negotiated.

"We negotiated about the length of (the school) day, but there is no separate layoff agreement that immunizes Promise Academy teachers from layoffs," he said. "If they wanted that, they should have negotiated it."

The District wants the union to come back to the table to negotiate cost-saving measures, but Jordan said that it will not do so. The SRC maintains that it has the right to throw out the contract entirely.

That issue is being taken to arbitration. In the meantime, Teti said, "they have to follow its provisions."

On Sunday Ackerman, as she has said before, termed herself “devastated” at the cuts and hoped that at least some of the layoffs could be reversed.

“I’m hopeful new funding from City Council and Harrisburg will allow us to call some back to work. I’ll keep fighting for that,” she said Sunday outside the auditorium.

That task is getting more complicated.

Late last week, Ackerman figured out a way to use federal Title I funds to save full-day kindergarten, clearly one of the most unpopular proposed cuts. This should have been good news for the District. But, politically, it has turned out to be a bad move.

She came up with this strategy after Mayor Nutter had stuck his neck out in calling for additional taxes for the District for this very purpose, and didn’t clue him in how she had found a way to save the day until the last minute.

The mayor was not pleased. It just raised more questions about how the District makes decisions.

“It happened so quickly,” Ackerman said of her Title I brainstorm. “It was last minute, I had a thought [how we could do this] late Thursday night. I wanted to get it done this weekend so wouldn’t have to lay off 200 kindergarten teachers.”

She added, “I certainly wouldn’t want to do anything to upset a mayor who has been such a strong ally.”

Except that she clearly did upset him. Last week, Nutter said he wouldn’t attach strings to additional city funds. By Sunday night, he had sent Ackerman and the SRC a nine-page letter asking for everything up to and including their car allowances. He wants unfettered access to the District’s books and the right to meet with any top staff and access any and all financial records “without seeking permission from the SRC or the Superintendent or other employees at any time.”

It seems like the mayor no longer trusts Ackerman and the SRC to make any decisions. He wants a list of schools to be closed as part of the facilities master planning process and the names of all paid consultants who were formerly on the District payroll – people likely collecting pensions and fees at the same time.

“I believe we must formalize our working relationship through a signed agreement,” the letter sniffed. It added later:

“There is on the streets of Philadelphia a deep concern and feeling of uncertainty about what the School District has done and will do if granted additional funding…now is the time for a rapid response and a clearing of the air.”

Then on Monday he promptly took off to visit kindergarten classes.

And Harrisburg? Ackerman said District officials have been lobbying legislators and that she has not personally spoken to Gov. Corbett, who wants to cut state education spending by $1.1 billion and is pursuing vouchers as his primary education reform platform.

Ackerman seemed resigned that some sort of voucher bill would pass.

Vouchers could cost Philadelphia millions if enough students leave the District for private schools at government expense. More than that, vouchers are regarded by some as the ultimate attack on public education and all it stands for.

Ackerman didn’t speak about that, instead saying that she was working to minimize their financial impact on the District.

“I’m hopeful that whatever decision is made on vouchers that it doesn’t take away funding from Philadelphia, that they find a way to hold us harmless,” she said. She added, “It seems that the voucher train has left the station.”

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Comments (33)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 15:21.

Jerry Jordan and the PFT Legal Team moved rather quickly. Now its game time folks. Its a court battle and I hope the PFT wins!!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 15:45.

Good riddance. 3,800 is not enough. We should lay off more. Maybe some won't be sitting on the beach down in North WIldwood and Sea Isle this summer laughing about their pay and benefits packages at the expense of taxpayers.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:06.

I'll be in Ocean City.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 06/09/2011 - 19:21.

Where does this nut case get off thinking we all go laugh it up in North Wildwood and Sea Isle? You go to Ocean City and I go to Avalon. As a matter of fact I plan on sitting in the Princeton tomorrow night laughing it up with some of my coworkers!!!!!!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:25.

You comment couldn't be more ignorant and misinformed. There are exceptional teachers that loss their jobs today.

Submitted by Meg (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:28.

At the expense of taxpayers?? I am a taxpayer. I also work very hard at this career. It is not a 9 to 5 job... and many are not today.
Why is it teachers do not get the respect that the average joe gives mail carriers, repair people or dentists. WE have strong educational backgrounds, most have strong work ethics and tolerate more nonsense daily than that average joe would. In a second grade classroom today, I was called some very foul things, pushed, spit at, had books thrown at me (that one by a child who was already suspended for Friday issues), in a 90 degree plus classroom. ANyone volunteering to do this tomorrow? No? That's okay - it's my room, my responsibilty and my choice. For the record - there are no beach trips in the plan for me this summer. I can't afford it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 18:48.

Kudos to you.....people have no clue what we do each and every day. We were told on Friday that we would find out if we had a job on Monday. We had all weekend to worry......but every one of the teachers at my school were at work today....even though every one of us knew our possible fate. I work with a exceptional group of committed, caring and professional teachers.

Submitted by Curious (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:35.

You sure are Mister Smart! You didn't want to go to college for years, get one or more graduate degrees, make about 30 or 40 grand to start out, pay off college loans forever, and manage about 150 city kids every day? You don't want people to judge your teaching by the performance of kids who don't work, don't care, and don't even come regularly? Yep, I guess you are smarter than us teachers! And I bet you care more about kids than we do, too!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/07/2011 - 21:54.

My friend you sound a little goofy-----and jealous.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 15:47.

The SRC should immediately cancel the contract, fire all employees, and hire them back at a cost that the citizens can afford.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:28.

try being a teacher then speak

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 17:50.

Hey clown, you can't even get enough teachers to stay in this sinkhole with the wages and benefits you're offering now. What makes you think people will rush in for lesser wages and benefits. Philly public teachers are amongst the lowest paid teachers in the entire state and work one of the hardest district in the country. Stop your whining. Better yet, run a classroom for a month then we'll let you run your mouth about how to finance education.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 18:17.

Union hack. The money is not there and it's not coming. There is no shortage of people who want to get in the door in Philly. Let the layoffs commence. I. Say fire everyone and then rehire during the summer at the lowest pay we can get away with. That will provide price discovery and the best deal for taxpayers. You union hacks are already against performance pay, so you are all equal except for bloated time served and bloated packages.

Submitted by TeachersStandTogether (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 18:27.

Why not just hire high school seniors to teach everyone else? You clearly don't believe the children of this city deserve any better.

Submitted by Kevin (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 18:41.

Never let the facts get in the way of a good story. No one is against performance pay. No one can agree on how to do it in a school system with so many extremes in kids' homelives, kids with IEPs, etc...
And please remember thta our current contract was praised by many as landmark reform contract...the first of its kind. Now it's not good enough
And by the way, please take your Republican Teahadist drivel someplace where you level of extreme intelligence will be better appreciated. You have no clue about anything related to teachers and teaching yet you feel the obligation to repeatedly post your hate-filled posts anonymously. I have challenged you and others like you (it's probably only you) repeatedly to come to my classroom and experience a day in the life of a teacher in Philadelphia. You wouldn't make it to lunch. You're nowhere to be found until another controversial issue pops up and then..there you are..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 19:30.

Kevin,

When teachers start dividing the argument(s) into political views, there’s a credibility loss in the argument.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 19:13.

I think you have me confused with the "other" anonymous lol. My whole family teaches in Philly. We support the PFT!!! You are right!! No one is lining up at the door to teach here. It is a hard job as is. Philly teachers deserve more pay--or better yet--let the District pay for all of our out of pocket expenses--My wife and I shell out over $1000 every year for supplies---why? We shouldn't have to--while PLymouth-Whitemarsh gives each teacher a $1000 stipend for supplies--my wife receives a whopping $100 towards supplies--what a joke.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:01.

Who let Tom Corbett post in this blog thread? /\

Submitted by Helen Gym on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:03.

The voucher train "has left the station"? 

Submitted by Annonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 17:00.

I wonder when the Ackerman train will leave the station! Apparently Ackerman sees more opportunities for herself with vouchers.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:03.

What a sad, bitter populace America has become. We have four endless wars. We bail out Wall Street to the tune of $700 billion, and then the bankers give each other huge bonuses. We have the largest military in the world. (Feel secure yet?)

In return we gut social services, decimate the already desperate poor, and then have jokers like the commenters above who are jealous of teachers making a living wage because they think education is a frill. What a sick country we are becoming.

Submitted by Mayday (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:37.

Bravo! You said it better than I could have.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:12.

We spend more on education, per capita, than any country in the world. What do we get for it? Obese kids who can't read staring at obese teachers who can't teach, but making promises that if we just keep throwing more money at it things will get better.

Submitted by Meg (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:22.

I have made no such promise. I can teach and need no more money - just a little respect, flexibility and basic supplies. It would be nice to have air conditioning, but I will even do without that. And part of that money we spend on education is because we educate everyone. EVERYONE is required to go through high school, not sent through a training program when they have no interest or drive to get a higher edcuation. We insist everyone goes through high school which is not done in other countries. We also educate other people's citizens.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:43.

We have a 50% droput rate in Philly, no? Do they still cost money when they're gone? If so, we have even more problems with efficiency to address.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 17:43.

Maybe if those obese kids had someone other than cynical fatheads like yourself they could get some help at home. My teachers showed me how to read, but it was my parents were the ones who taught me to read by reinforcing it every night. Throwing money at the problem is not the problem. The money never gets there thanks to the administration that syphons it off through their inflated salaries, hiring their buddies and pet projects. Why don't you go bitch at them for a while.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:22.

According to the Inquirer, an injunction has been issued, and layoff notices for 1,500 teachers are rescinded at least until a June 14 hearing.

Submitted by Erika Owens on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 16:31.

Yup, just updated the post with the link. Kristen Graham's Philly School Files blog says:

"UPDATE, 4:05 p.m. - An injunction has been issued, and layoff notices for 1,500 teachers are rescinded at least until a June 14 hearing, reports my colleague Troy Graham, who was inside the courtroom."

Submitted by Erika Owens on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 17:04.

Another update: District press release on layoffs.

Submitted by Annonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 17:23.

Shana Kemp - Spin Doctor. Notice how she conveniently forgot how Ackerman/SRC wasted stimulus money? Ackerman can blame Corbett all she wants but the buck stops - and starts - with her and the SRC. They blew money for 3 years. Today's Daily New Cover is a reflection of Ackerman's inability to run a school district.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 18:45.

So much for Promise Academy teachers being protected from layoffs...the ax fell swiftly and often today at Clemente.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 19:03.

PFT!!!PFT!!!PFT!!! Its about time the Mayor is involved and the IRS and the City Controller and the PFT President and its legal team. Lets see what Ackerman has now!!! The Judge will make his ruling on June 14th. I predict a PFT victory.

Promise Academy teachers being exempt from layoffs was NOT negotiated. If they wanted it then the District should have negotiated it. Oh well, they didn't boo hoo!!!

Also, expedited arbitration is up and running to stop the SRC from cancelling the contract!!

Submitted by gdgman3 on Wed, 06/08/2011 - 10:50.

Does anyone know the number of special education teachers laid off across the district and the possibility of getting called back in September? Also, is it true that there are special education teachers who are not 'highly qualified' teaching at the secondary level, in violation of the law? If so, how does when find the evidence of this and lodge a formal complaint?

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