Thousands of kids in the Detroit Public Schools system could see their school close or become a charter school next fall.
Emergency Financial Manager Robert Bobb laid out his reorganization plan today. It calls for closing seven schools this summer and one next summer. Another 18 schools will close by the fall unless a charter school operator can be identified to run them. And 27 more schools will be offered for conversion to charter schools, but will remain open otherwise.
Bobb says national experts and the community will carefully vet the applications to find “superstar” charter operators:
"It doesn’t do us any good to have anyone come in and receive a charter if in fact they do not have a proven track record of student achievement."
Detroit Board of Education President Anthony Adams says the troubled school district can either continue to close schools, or rethink its approach completely:
"If it is our responsibility to provide the highest level of education for students within our community, then we have to embrace a different service model of what we do."
The list of 32 schools is fewer than half the troubled school district will have to close or convert to charters to erase a $327 million dollar deficit. Bobb says it will be his successor’s job to finish the job. His contract expires at the end of June.