Houston School District plan triggers protest from black, Hispanic groups
/A Houston school district plan that
might turn three low-achieving but historically important schools in
minority neighborhoods over to private contractors triggered a stinging
rebuttal Friday from black and Hispanic community leaders who accused
officials of neglecting the schools, then sidestepping responsibility
for fixing them. Yolanda Smith, president of the Houston chapter of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said her
organization is outraged by the possibility of turning Yates, Kashmere
and Sam Houston high schools over to for-profit educational companies.
The NAACP, she said, will seek an injunction to stop the effort.
"Houston taxpayers hold HISD accountable for closing the gaps in
educational opportunity and student achievement and do not expect our
public dollars to be spent on private entities," Smith said. " ... We
did not create a public entity in HISD to then have the public entity
outsource this responsibility." Terry Abbott, spokesman for the Houston
Independent School District, said indignation over the plan, which was
outlined earlier this week by Superintendent Abe Saavedra during his
annual state of the schools address, is misplaced and based on media
accounts that he contends are inaccurate. While contracting with
for-profit entities to run the schools is a possibility, Abbott said,
the district also welcomes reform proposals from district employees and
community groups. Texas education officials have decreed that the
schools, which have been deemed "low-performing" for two consecutive
years, must be dramatically improved or closed. Also at the NAACP news
conference were U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Houston, and
representatives from the League of United Latin American Citizens, the
Houston Area Urban League, Houston Federation of Teachers and other
groups. Jackson Lee admonished HISD to seek more community input before
making a decision to privatize the schools. Private contractors, she
suggested, would "dumb down" the schools, first making cosmetic
improvements to gain favor, then cutting back on less visible but
important educational programs. [more]