Oakland schools are bankrupt. Teachers show up for classes when they want, not when the contract says they are to teach. Now the unions are going to use the COVOD/Faulci Scam as an excuse to close the schools. The good news is that it does not matter—Oakland schools have been closed to education for years.
“Unified School District finalized its plan for closing as many as eight schools and consolidate five others due to lagging enrollment, teachers, parents and students are speaking out against the move.
Community members are planning to hold car caravan protests on Tuesday and Thursday to let district board members know they oppose the closures.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported some teachers plan to declare a hunger strike.
Yup, 13 schools are about to close—parents do not care—and the unions will go on strike.
Oakland Teachers, Community Members Plan School Closure Protests
Caravan protests and a possible teachers hunger strike are expected to start Tuesday
By Bay City News, 2/1/22
Unified School District finalized its plan for closing as many as eight schools and consolidate five others due to lagging enrollment, teachers, parents and students are speaking out against the move.
Community members are planning to hold car caravan protests on Tuesday and Thursday to let district board members know they oppose the closures.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported some teachers plan to declare a hunger strike.
The district has recommended the following school closures:
- Brookfield Elementary (by 2023)
- Carl Munck Elementary (by 2023)
- Grass Valley Elementary (by 2023)
- Horace Mann Elementary (by 2024)
- Korematsu Discovery Academy (by 2024)
- Parker K-8 (by 2023)
- Prescott Elementary (by 2023)
The district has recommended the following school mergers:
- Manzanita Community School merge Fruitvale Elementary (by 2024)
- Ralph Bunche merge with Dewey High School (by 2023)
- RISE Elementary merge with New Highland (by 2023)
- Westlake Middle School merge with West Oakland Middle School (by 2023)
Oakland Not for Sale (ONFS), Parent Voices Oakland, Action 2020, and others will caravan from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday to target specific board members.
A board hearing and discussion of the closures took place Monday evening, and the board is expected to vote on the issue Feb. 8.
According to the district, school mergers or closures are needed due to declining enrollment, particularly in its elementary schools. Because public schools are funded based on enrollment, this has led to what’s expected to be a $19.4 million deficit over the next two years. The district says 35 percent of its schools are enrolled at “below sustainable” levels.
Declining enrollments, the district says, are caused by factors including lower birth rates, pandemic-related moves out of the district and a lack of affordable housing.