By Reginald Johnson
BRIDGEPORT --- Is the city school system on the verge of collapse?
Education
officials are warning that if the school district doesn’t get millions more
dollars than what has been proposed by Mayor Joseph P. Ganim, some schools will
be closed and vital services cut.
Already the over last four years, the Board of
Education has eliminated 230 positions and slashed $38 million in spending. Many services --- such as those provided by
guidance counselors, social workers and the parents center --- have been
slashed to the bone.
Officials say that things are so bad that the
state might be asked to take over the school system.
“We will close schools,”
said board Chairman John Weldon at a City Council hearing last week. “We will
become a school system in name only. We will have buildings that don’t provide
the very core services that they exist to provide. Why would anyone send their
kids to a school system like that? The school system is being bankrupted. It’s
insolvent.”
But other city departments, including the police and city attorney’s office,
are receiving increases. Ganim, up for reelection this year, has also promised city residents a modest tax
reduction.
School officials made clear they need a minimum of $11.5 million more
from the city, just to maintain existing levels of service.
According to state figures, Bridgeport contributes less money to local
schools than any other town or city in the state. Bridgeport funds only 26 per
cent of the school budget, while the state puts in 74 percent.
Bridgeport’s per pupil spending is lower than the
other largest cities in the state. Figures from the 2017-18 fiscal year show Hartford spending $19,916
per pupil; New Haven, $18,381; Waterbury,
$15,546, and Bridgeport, $14,241.
Hall School in the East End may close if the city doesn't provide the school district with more fuunding. |
City Council Member Kyle Langan, D-132, said the present situation is
not acceptable. “What is the message in the numbers?” he asks. “Do we value
incarceration over education? Do we believe that more police equates to a safer
environment? Do we believe our children are not capable and therefore
undeserving of an equal chance? Do we believe we are a lost cause and have no other
option but to become a reactive community?
Langan criticized the fact that police protection
and other departments such as the city attorney’s office are getting increases in
funding in the mayor’s budget, but not education.
“When we remove the state and federal aid from our education budget, we as
a city, contributed only $61 million to education (11 % of our budget) versus $174
million for public safety,” he said.
The police and city attorney’s office have
received regular funding increases since Mayor Ganim was reelected in 2015, while
the school board has received almost no increases.
The city council member said that it was
possible to come up with the additional $11.5 million that the school board needs
this year. Langan said that if the increases in public safety and city
attorneys office together are eliminated and the tax cut is dropped, it would
go a long way towards coming up with the needed revenue for schools.
“The
question is, what do we value?.... We can make it,” he said.
Langan
also said that the huge amount of money the city spends on special education ---
about $35 million --- can be reduced to generate more funds for education as a
whole. Bridgeport now sends the students
that are in need of special education out of district for instruction.
He said the city can work with the school board to develop a plan for
teaching special ed kids in Bridgeport, and reap significant savings. “But that
takes leadership,” he said.
Several
of the speakers at last week’s hearing also talked of values --- the paramount
need to invest in children and their future. One of those was a teacher from
Hall School in the East End --- which could be closed if the district continues
to have a funding shortfall.
“I ask you to look in the eyes of my children and tell them they’re not worth it,” she said.
“I ask you to look in the eyes of my children and tell them they’re not worth it,” she said.
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