What Do Bruce Monroe Elementary School & the Takoma Educational Campus Have In Common?

Both schools have been considered under-enrolled, yet one was demolished and the other completely refurbished.  William Jordan, a member of the list serve Concerned for DCPS has some theories as to why.  I’ve reprinted them below because I think they are worthy of your consideration.

Posted on the Concerned For DCPS List Serve on January 5, 2012:

Takoma Educational Campus after the Rehabilitation

I would suggest anyone who has followed or participated in the “Bruce Monroe School” over the years to pick up the Wednesday, December 28, 2011 addition of Northwest_Current 12.28.11 .  On the front page is an article about the reopening of the Takoma Educational Campus one year after a fire closed the school.  The article is relevant to Bruce Monroe because the city and officials, including Councilmember Graham, etc. found a way to address the needs of Takoma doing the very things they told our community and Bruce Monroe stakeholders they could not do months prior to the Takoma fire.   It reveals the pattern of dishonesty and political disdain by then Chancellor Rhee and Councilmember Graham toward this community and the population of families and students served by Bruce Monroe.

Bruce Monroe Elementary after the Demolition

The article explains how the city initially planned to make $2 million in repairs but later decided to invest $25.5 million in a complete rehab.  Via a bait & switch, Councilmember Graham and Rhee mislead this community into believing that the DCPS capital budget could not be adjusted to do a complete rehab of Bruce Monroe either as part of the redevelopment of the old site or as rehab of Bruce Monroe at Park View as they promised in prior years.

As evidence of what was actually promised, the notes from community meetings in which the future of Bruce Monroe was discussed can be downloaded via the following links.:

Notes_from_Meeting_With_Graham_and_Rhee_4-6-10

Parents_Meet_With_Jim_Graham_March_16_2010

Notes_from_Meeting_With_Graham_and_Rhee_4-6-10

 

Bruce Monroe, Park View & Meyer were closed down as part of the 2008 DCPS Rhee closings supposedly because of low enrollment.  It should be noted that Takoma Enrollment was on par with Meyer.  However, Bruce Monroe was reconstituted and the students shipped to Park View the least hospitable of all 3 buildings. In fact Park View at the time could have easily been considered dangerous.  Despite this Bruce Monroe students were not relocated to the Meyer building which was in much better shape, they went to Park View.   In the meantime, Councilmember Graham placed a boxing program in Meyer Elementary, to which he had been funneling earmarks for years with no community or practical oversight.  Clearly, Ward 1 closings were not so much about education, but politics and real estate development.  Rhee closed schools with minimal responsibility and Councilmember Graham place his political concerns above those of DCPS students or the community at large.

In this case Councilmember Graham and then Chancellor Rhee engaged in operating at one of the lowest political and  ethical standards possible under the guise of school reform.  To politically punish and breakup the Bruce Monroe school family, they place a school primarily serving working class Latino and African American families in building (Park View) which at the time had become unfit when better alternatives were available.  The positive outcome for Takoma when placed in context makes clear the dishonest nature of reform under Rhee, the unethical cesspool that is Ward 1 politics and ultimately the nexus between pay-to-play politics, real estate development and school reform.

William Jordan

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