The small
Buena Vista, Michigan school district (500 students) closed its doors this
week—more than a month early—because it is broke, despite the fact that its teachers
agreed to work for free. If the district does not find the money to reopen,
seniors may be prevented from graduating.
The cause of
the district’s financial woes, according to the Huffington Post, was that it spent money provided by
the state for running the Wolverine Secure Treatment Center, an organization
with which the district no longer works. Consequently, the state has frozen
district funds until the district can repay $402,000. The district also lost $3 million in state funding due to
declining enrollment,
Yahoo News reported. However, Buena Vista, like many other districts throughout
the U.S., has suffered most significantly from across the board cuts in
education spending by state governments.
The state of
Michigan could have bailed out the struggling district, thus saving parents the
hassle and expense of finding childcare for a month and the government the
expense of paying unemployment insurance to dozens of teachers, but that
apparently would have sent the wrong message The Michigan Department of
Education argued that the district created the problem through incompetence and
must now pay the penalty (even if that means that children, parents and
employees are the ones who actually pay).
The local
school board could also have found a way to keep its schools open, but
unanimously approved the closure. The board approved a “deficit reduction” plan
they hope will appease the state and result in the release of funds for next
school year. It also proposed a summer boot camp emphasizing
standardized testing skills (to be paid for with federal funds) in lieu of
normal instruction,
Michigan Radio reported on Wednesday.
In late
breaking news, state Superintendent Mike Flanagan approved the Buena Vista
school board deficit reduction plan, allowing the district to start up again
and finish the school year without having to resort to their boot camp plan,
according to the Holland Sentinel. The district will also recall 27
laid-off teachers.
What remains
unclear (probably deliberately so) are the details of the deficit reduction
plan. Will pay and/or benefits be slashed for the 2013-2014 school year? Will
course offerings be cut and the teaching and support staffs downsized? Will
furlough days be imposed? Buena Vista may be out of the frying pan for the
current school year, but back they students and teachers will likely be back
into the fire next year.
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