(A more accurate title for this article would be "Crumbling, Destitute 
Schools Product of Detroit's Economic Collapse".)

Crumbling, Destitute Schools Threaten Detroit’s Recovery
By JULIE BOSMAN

DETROIT — In Kathy Aaron’s decrepit public school, the heat fills the 
air with a moldy, rancid odor. Cockroaches, some three inches long, 
scuttle about until they are squashed by a student who volunteers for 
the task. Water drips from a leaky roof onto the gymnasium floor.

“We have rodents out in the middle of the day,” said Ms. Aaron, a 
teacher of 18 years. “Like they’re coming to class.”

Detroit’s public schools are a daily shock to the senses, run down after 
years of neglect and mismanagement, while failing academically and 
teetering on the edge of financial collapse. On Wednesday, teachers 
again protested the conditions, calling in sick en masse and forcing a 
shutdown of most of the city’s almost 100 schools.

As Michigan’s governor, Rick Snyder, grapples with the crisis in Flint, 
where residents have been poisoned by the local water supply under a 
state-appointed emergency manager, he has also had to confront the 
emergency here, another poor, largely African-American city with a 
problem that has also festered under state control.

Things have become so bad, district officials say, that the Detroit 
public school system could be insolvent by April.

“They’re in need of a transformational change,” Mr. Snyder, a 
Republican, acknowledged in his State of the State speech Tuesday. “Too 
many schools are failing at their central task. Not all Detroit students 
are getting the education they deserve.”

Many worry that the state of the schools will hamper Detroit’s recovery 
from bankruptcy, a recovery evident in the new loft-style townhouses and 
the bustling Whole Foods that Ms. Aaron passes near her school, where 
she teaches fifth grade.

Residents wonder how the city can ever recoup its lost population and 
attract young families if the public schools are in abysmal shape.

“As we begin to rebuild this city and we’re seeing money and development 
moving in, people are understanding that there is no way we can improve 
Detroit without a strong educational system,” said Mary Sheffield, a 
native of Detroit and a City Council member. “We have businesses and 
restaurants and arenas, but our schools are falling apart and our 
children are uneducated. There is no Detroit without good schools.”

In protest over the conditions, teachers began a series of sickouts in 
recent weeks, inconveniencing many families and reducing classroom 
instruction time for many students who could ill afford it, but pushing 
the matter to the forefront.

The problems predate the municipal bankruptcy. One of the biggest is 
enrollment, which has been in free fall. In 2000, Detroit Public Schools 
had close to 150,000 students; this year, there are fewer than 45,000.

In recent decades, large numbers of people have left Detroit, which was 
once the nation’s fourth most populous city. Many of those who stayed 
chose to enroll their children in traditional public schools in the 
suburbs, or in charter schools, which more than half of school-age 
children from Detroit now attend.

According to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, about 20 
percent of school-age children in Detroit were attending charter schools 
in 2006. By 2014, that number was up to 55 percent.

Most of the charter schools are outside district control but receive 
public money, drawing funds from the traditional system that would be 
used for its overhead and wages, critics complain.

Even after closing schools and reducing its work force, the Detroit 
Public Schools have $3.5 billion in outstanding debt, much of it from 
pension liabilities, according to a report this month from the Citizens 
Research Council of Michigan, a nonpartisan public affairs research 
organization in Lansing.

The appointment in 2009 of an emergency manager to take charge of the 
struggling district has not turned the finances around. (The appointment 
predates the election of Mr. Snyder in 2010, but he has elected to 
maintain the arrangement.)

“We’re on our fourth emergency manager here,” said Craig Thiel, a senior 
research associate for the Citizens Research Council. “They each seem to 
be borrowing from the same playbook: figure out a way to get through the 
current year, end the year without going insolvent, and then push costs 
onto the next year in the hopes that things will improve in some way. 
They’re dealing with these debts that should have been paid off years 
ago that have instead been put on future budgets.”

Academically, the district’s performance is also alarming. Among 
big-city school districts, Detroit has come in last every year since 
2012, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress exam. 
Only 27 percent of fourth graders are proficient in reading; 36 percent 
are proficient in math.

In response to the sickouts, the mayor of Detroit, Mike Duggan, has 
ordered a districtwide inspection of each school. Last week, while 
touring the schools, he came upon a dead mouse in an elementary school.

Mr. Snyder has pushed a plan to create a new school district to run the 
existing schools, spinning off the old one as a subsidiary that would 
exist solely to pay down debt. In his speech Tuesday, he urged lawmakers 
to pass that legislation.

Last week, the Michigan Senate introduced legislation that would 
establish a nine-person school board, appointed by Mr. Snyder, a 
Republican, and Mr. Duggan, a Democrat, which would eventually hire a 
district superintendent.

Many people in Detroit worry that it will not be enough to save their 
schools. They want a school board that will be elected locally, bringing 
an end to state-appointed emergency management. And they are calling for 
more immediate intervention to address the deteriorating state of school 
buildings.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Snyder, who was also dealing with the public 
health crisis in Flint caused by an emergency manager’s decision to 
switch the city’s tap water source to save money, said he understood the 
frustrations.

“Governor Snyder is working to improve academics and finances in Detroit 
schools,” said Laura Biehl, the spokeswoman. “Right now, the district 
pays a figure equal to $1,100 per child for debt service. That’s money 
that can best be spent in the classroom.”

Last week, many Detroit schools were shuttered and empty because of the 
sickouts. Outside the Durfee Elementary-Middle School on the city’s west 
side, where heating problems have been so severe that the school has 
relied on portable heaters, a handwritten sign on the door announced 
“School Close.”

At Palmer Park Preparatory Academy, a school that the Detroit Federation 
of Teachers said was ridden with rats and crumbling ceilings, parents 
said they were exhausted by the problems.

Tanya Cox, who sends three of her children there, said there are 42 
students in her son Damir’s fourth-grade class. “With so many kids in 
the classroom,” she said, “I don’t think the teachers can teach.”

Not everyone has been sympathetic to the teachers’ protest. “There is no 
excuse for the illegal teacher strikes that have closed dozens of 
schools in the past week,” an editorial in The Detroit News said last week.

On Wednesday, the Detroit Public Schools sought a temporary injunction 
against more than two dozen teachers in response to the sickouts, 
arguing that they had deprived students of access to education.

Michelle Zdrodowski, a spokeswoman for Detroit Public Schools, said in a 
statement, “These ongoing illegal actions chosen by teachers represent 
an extreme disservice to the more than 44,790 students and their 
families who today lost another day of instruction and were again 
inconvenienced or caused to lose wages due to these closures.”

Many state legislators from outside Detroit have balked at having the 
state take on the school district’s substantial debts. Yet they are 
hesitant to allow the district to continue on a path to insolvency, 
given the level of urgency.

“They’re in a dire crisis level,” said Camille Wilson, an associate 
professor of education at Wayne State University here. “On one hand, the 
state has a tremendous amount of responsibility to help with some 
financial relief, given that they’ve managed and controlled part of the 
system for many years now. On the other hand, I think the local people 
and the citizens should be allowed to play a role as well.”

Last week at the Charles L. Spain school in Midtown, where Ms. Aaron 
teaches, staff members pointed out their building’s deterioration. In 
the gym, the air was filled with a stifling, moldy smell. The floors 
were buckled and partly ripped out, revealing a damp, black substance 
underneath.

“You hear the water dripping?” said Lakia Wilson, the guidance 
counselor, nodding at the spot on the floor where water from the roof 
had accumulated into a cloudy pool. The day after a reporter and a 
photographer were given a tour of the building, health officials arrived 
at the school and blocked access to the gym with sheets of plastic, a 
teacher said.

Andre Harlan, the gym teacher at the Spain school, said he had breathing 
problems that he traced to the air quality in the gym, which the school 
stopped using two months ago.

Until further notice, gym class is held in the hallway.

“There’s progress in Detroit,” Mr. Harlan said. “But not inside the 
schools.”

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