While no local schools will be closed, the South Side was hit with a number of school shut-downs.
Chicago Public Schools will close 54 school programs and 61 buildings, officials announced Thursday.
The city was tossed into upheaval as parents and teachers slowly began to learn which schools will be closed at the end of this school year.
Chicago Public Schools officials released a final list at 5 p.m., but principals and aldermen started leaking the information as early as 6 a.m. Thursday.
The announcement made history as the largest amount of school closings the city has ever seen. In total, 71 schools will be drastically changed: six schools were named as turnarounds, 11 will be co-located and 54 will be shut down.
Most are on the South and West sides of the city.
No schools in the 19th Ward were marked for closing either in the final list released Thursday or the preliminary list.
Union officials were even more outraged to learn that Mayor Rahm Emanuel is on a family skiing vacation in Utah during the announcements.
"Today, a vacationing Mayor Rahm Emanuel is sending our school district into utter chaos,"
a CTU release said. "CPS lacks the capacity to close 50 schools. The CTU contends closing these schools are unnecessary, will not save the district or taxpayers a single dollar, and put students’ safety and academics at risk."
Schools that take in more students will receive extra perks, CPS CEO
Barbara Byrd-Bennett announced Thursday. Those include air conditioning, additional library books and discretionary funding for principals.
Additionally, 19 schools will be given new programs in fine arts, Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) and International Baccalaureate.
The promised goods aren’t enough for some principals. Clarice Berry, the president of the Chicago Principals and Administrators Association, spoke to the Chicago Tribune before Thursday’s 5 p.m. school closings announcement.
“I’m angry. I’m upset. I’m shaking to the core. I didn’t think they’d actually go through with this, the largest number of closings ever. There’s been no real planning,”
she told the Chicago Tribune.
With nearly half its schools defined as “underutilized,” CPS officials say the school closings are necessary because of a $1 billion budget deficit in the coming fiscal year.
Final list of school closings from CPS:
Close Altgeld into Wentworth @ Altgeld (new STEM program at Altgeld)
Close Armstrong and May into Leland @ May (new STEM program at Leland)
Phase out Attucks over 2 years, close into Beethoven Fall 2015
Close Banneker into Mays @ Banneker
Close Bethune into Gregory
Close Bontemps into Nicholson (new STEM program at Nicholson)
Close Calhoun into Cather
Close Canter into Harte and Ray
Close De Duprey and Von Humboldt into De Diego (new IB programme at De Diego)
Close Delano into Melody @ Delano
Close Dumas into Wadsworth @ Dumas (new STEM program at Wadsworth)
Close Emmet into Ellington and DePriest (new STEM programs at Ellington and DePriest)
Close Ericson into Sumner (new STEM program at Sumner)
Close Fermi into South Shore Fine Arts
Close Garfield Park into Faraday
Close Garvey into Mount Vernon
Close Goldblatt into Hefferan (new STEM program at Hefferan)
Close Goodlow into Earle @ Goodlow (new STEM program at Earle)
Close Henson into C. Hughes
Close Herbert into Dett @ Herbert
Close M. Jackson into Fort Dearborn
Close Key into Ellington (new STEM program atEllington)
Close King into Jensen
Close Kohn into Cullen, Lavizzo, and L. Hughes (new STEM program in L. Hughes)
Close Lafayette into Chopin
Close Lawrence into Burnham @ Lawrence
Close Manierre into Jenner (new IB programme at Jenner)
Close Marconi into Tilton (new STEM program at Tilton)
Close Mayo into Wells @ Mayo (new IB programme at Wells)
Close Morgan into Ryder
Close Overton into Mollison (new IB programme at Mollison)
Close Owens into Gompers (new STEM program at Gompers)
Close Paderewski into Cardenas and Castellanos
Close Parkman into Sherwood
Close Peabody into Otis
Close Pershing West into Pershing East @ PershingWest
Close Pope into Johnson
Close Ross into Dulles
Close Ryerson into Ward @ Ryerson (new STEM program at Ward)
Close Sexton into Fiske @ Sexton (new IB programme at Fiske)
Close Songhai into Curtis
Close Stewart into Brennemann
Close Stockton into Courtenay @ Stockton
Close Trumbull into Chappell, McPherson, and McCutcheon
Close West Pullman into Haley (new Fine and Performing Arts program at Haley)
Close Williams ES and Williams MS into Drake @ Williams; co-locate with Urban Prep
Close Woods into Bass
Close Yale into Harvard
Close Near North and Buckingham into Montefiore
Mason moves from K-11 to K-8*
Co-Location Schools
Richard T. Crane Medical Prep HS with Chicago Talent Development HS and Richard T. Crane Technical Prep HS
Noble-Comer with Revere ES
New Noble HS with Bowen HS
Montessori Charter of Englewood with O’Toole
Kwame Nkrumah Charter with Gresham
New KIPP with Hope HS
Disney II expansion with Marshall Middle
Belmont Cragin K-8 with Northwest Middle (Belmont Cragin preK program remains in current location)
New Noble HS with Corliss HS
Dodge with Morton
Drake with Urban Prep Academy for Young Men – Bronzeville
Turnaround Schools
Barton
Chalmers
Dewey
O’Keefe
Carter
Lewis
Source:
Patch
PIIGS In America: Is Illinois Preparing To Request A Federal Bailout?
Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt: Former Senior Policy Advisor In The U.S. Department Of Education 'The Deliberate Dumbing Down Of America'