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No More Pretend Budgeting

When we take a hard look at Hartford’s most neglected schools (and communities), it is impossible to ignore the years of half-hearted investment in the face of extraordinary need.  It happens every day across the country; states and cities tell their school districts to “do the best with what you have.”  The demoralizing message goes to superintendents, who pass it along to school principals, who, in turn, filter it down to teachers … and families.  Budgets remain remarkably similar year to year – and some schools remain persistently underfunded.  If Hartford can stop that kind of budgeting, it can be one of the few cities in America to stop pretending about children’s futures.

 

At last night’s District community budget forum, Chief Financial Officer Paula Altieri crystalized the situation.  With flat funding, she said, “We’ve been on our own fiscal cliff for the past eight years.”  Our question, then, is, if the fiscal cliff is a constant, when will we change how we allocate resources?

 

Board of Education Finance and Audit Committee Chair Craig Stallings has been vocal about welcoming any and all Hartford residents to attend and engage with upcoming discussions.  That invitation extends to each of us; we at Achieve Hartford! are taking the finance chair up on his offer right now.
Let’s be honest with ourselves:  Our system is perfectly designed to produce the results with which we have struggled for decades.  So we must make different choices that not only change outcomes … but also change the system.
Areas of High Need Are Already Known: So Fund Them
It is no secret that many neighborhood schools fall below performance expectations in large part because of the immense concentration of need they face.  If we know where the most vulnerable children go to school, and we make equity the goal, then funding must align with need.  Period.
What does that mean for budgeting right now?

 

  1. It is time to face the fact that our current number of schools is unsustainable.  We must restart the public conversation over the specific combination of building closures and school consolidation … and now – not next year.  The Board of Education can decide on a smaller, smartly realigned set of school buildings, with the express purpose of providing higher-quality education than before.  We don’t need to wait for another Equity 2020 process to launch into another quagmire or for a permanent superintendent to act as the savior.  The entire city knows school consolidation must happen.  Board Member Stallings has said we have 20 schools too many; CFO Altieri estimates we have seven too-many high schools.  Enrollment trends matter.  Favored school names can be kept; just in fewer buildings.
  2. Looking to students first.  The Board must make similarly transparent and difficult decisions about the reorganization of central office for the purpose of downsizing.  If there is a choice between directly funding children and teachers in the neglected North End, versus protecting central office staff, we must choose to fund the needs of students – especially if the community is expected to help make and accept tough decisions regarding school consolidation.

 

Also, in a plea reminiscent of past Superintendent Beth Schiavino Narvaez’s forewarning of what Hartford stood to lose (from $20 million in budget cuts), HPS Operations Manager for Athletics Nicole Porter-Blake this week delivered spreadsheets to Board Member Stallings’ Finance and Audit Committee, suggesting $12.2 million (or an alternative lower-cost budget of $5.2 million) is needed to provide middle and high school athletic programming on par with the suburbs.  Right now, CFO Altieri says there’s $143,000 in the budget.  We know there are a number of examples just like this, where needed services do not have their needed budget, and without drastic changes in resource allocation, there is no way the HPS tagline should be, “Every Child Thrives. Every School is High Performing. No Exceptions.”

 

 

The Bottom Line

 

When revenue increases are a dream – and the current best-case scenario is being “only” about $6.6 million in the hole (see the Courant article on that), we at least need to have a set of programming goals to drive budget decisions.  That, it seems, is exactly what is missing.  The budget remains remarkably similar to last year.  Waiting for next year, when there will be a permanent superintendent and more time to engage the community, is a weak move.  Making decisions based on a plan, as opposed to simply cutting 5 percent across the board?  Far better approach.

 

What we are advocating for, approaching the 11th hour of the budgeting process, is to let necessity become the mother of invention.

 

Given where we’ve been for the past eight years and where we now are headed, hoping for more funding is a bad gamble.

 

The challenges facing our schools are not shrinking; they’re escalating.  We must learn to do more with less.

 

Why wait to redesign the car’s engine we know must go twice as far on half the fuel?

 

Hartford leaders can start redesigning now, by making difficult but necessary cuts to central office staff and starting the school consolidation process based on facts already on hand.

 

If we don’t do this, we are once again only “pretend” budgeting, sending the age-old message to our neediest schools, that you won’t get what you need … so just do the best with what you have.


Weaver 2019 Is Moving Along

The Hartford Board of Education last week approved design specifications for the three-academy structure of the new Weaver High School.  Later this month, or next month, a community forum will focus on the building design that architects and construction management firms have worked on for years – literally.  And at last week’s Weaver Steering Committee meeting, there was a sense (at least from us) that the real work of designing high-performing neighborhood high school options in North Hartford has begun.

 

Four committees, each meant to have representation from at least one parent from one of the three Weaver academies – Kinsella Magnet, High School Inc., and Journalism and Media – along with representation from the Blue Hills Civic Association, reviewed their committee membership and charge so far.  The four initial design committees include:

 

  1. Construction
  2. Student Experience (In and Out of School)
  3. School Climate and Culture
  4. Family and Community Engagement

 

Each committee will be setting its meeting times shortly, publicizing membership, and prepping to plan and test out design strategies in two-month cycles.  And a strategy to keep the larger community up to date on the design work is being formulated.

 

 

The Bottom Line

 

While the Granby Avenue facility’s latest redesign is being completed, the obvious challenge is to gel its three separate schools (and three separate leadership teams) into a reinvented and newly iconic Weaver that, as the original school did so well, excites the community and all families and feeder schools.  The good news, from our perspective, is that the Blue Hills Civic Association has been deeply involved in work with community leaders for more than a year, sharpening the vision of what a new Weaver could be (as well as pinning down the standards needed).

 

The absolute worst thing that could happen would be for this process to start off with an aspiration to raise the standard of education delivered in Hartford, only to morph into a series of decisions made with no mind paid to quality – a la Equity 2020.  The work is off to a positive start, from our perspective on the steering committee, but more help is needed, and we encourage anyone with an interest to reach out – whether you want to serve on the committee Achieve Hartford! is co-chairing on Student Experience, or any of the other committees mentioned above.  Each one reach one!


Get in the Game with Brackets for Good

Who doesn’t love a little friendly competition?

Achieve Hartford! is excited to be participating in the Brackets For Good tournament. During this bracketed tournament for charities, 64 local nonprofit organizations will compete to make the most points — raise the most dollars. Every point counts! The overall winner (nonprofit with the most overall dollars raised) will receive a $10,000 prize.

It’s time for us to get some points on the board.  You can help us by shooting a jump shot here.

See the bracket match-ups and join Team Achieve Hartford!.

The tournament begins at 8 p.m. on February 24, and we only have a few days to make into the next round.

Donations made to Achieve Hartford! through the Brackets for Good tournament will support our mission of helping the community and Hartford Public Schools graduate more students who are prepared for college and career.

Achieve Hartford! is an independent nonprofit organization with the belief that strong schools lead to a strong city.  As Mayors, Boards of Education and Superintendents change over time, we are the consistent voice pushing for high-quality education in our city since 2008.

Get in the game and help Hartford kids succeed.

[clickToTweet tweet=”@BracketsForGood is on & @achievehartford is in it to win it.https://hartford.bfg.org/ #CompetitiveGiving” quote=”@BracketsForGood is on & @achievehartford is in it to win it.https://hartford.bfg.org/ #CompetitiveGiving”]

Brackets For Good

Brackets For good is the sport for nonprofits. Inspired by college basketball brackets, Brackets For Good is a charitable, online fundraising tournament where up to 64 hand-selected, local nonprofits with a 501(c)3 status in good standing compete for donations while earning increased awareness along the way. All participating nonprofits have a chance at winning $10,000 unrestricted grant courtesy of the tournament’s presenting sponsor. Watch this YouTube video to see how it works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jskPh8hBh_8


Contact Us

Achieve Hartford!
1429 Park St., Unit 114
Hartford, CT 06106

 

(860) 244-3333

 

info@achievehartford.org

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