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Budget Necessities for Local Schools by Lynda Rubin
Inequity Still Reigns by Diane Payne
Action Item 10, $117 million for Contracts with Dell Marketing and Apple, Inc by Lisa Haver
A grass-roots organization of parents, community members, and school staff, fighting to defend public education. We work together to provide analysis and demand accountability from the School District of Philadelphia to provide students with a high-quality education.
Click on title to read
Budget Necessities for Local Schools by Lynda Rubin
Inequity Still Reigns by Diane Payne
Action Item 10, $117 million for Contracts with Dell Marketing and Apple, Inc by Lisa Haver
Click on title to read.
Calls for a More Engaging, Transparent Budget Process/Priorities Go Ignored by Diane Payne
Action Item 31: Vote NO by Ilene Poses
School District of Philadelphia Trained Bassoonist by Barbara McDowell Dowdall
by Lynda Rubin
The Board of Education scheduled its annual budget hearing just one hour before its April action meeting. With a lengthy presentation from Chief Financial Officer Uri Monson on the agenda, followed by questions from the Board and testimony from nine public speakers, there was not much time for careful deliberation about the Board’s own spending priorities. It seemed at times that the tail once again was wagging the dog, with Board members’ comments and questions reflecting Board compliance rather than Board leadership.
by Diane Payne
Over the years, APPS members and others have testified about the barriers to finding basic information on the District website, for content as well as for technical reasons. There is too often a lack of straightforward and honest presentations. The agenda for this action meeting is another such example. Omitted from the agenda posted online and distributed at the meeting, again, were the legislative update given by Board Member Fix Lopez, the Parent and Community Advisory presentation given by Board Member Thompson, and the Student Representative presentation given by Rebecca Allen. None of these were about issues that had just arisen. The agenda also failed to include dollar amounts for Item 8, Item 9 and Item 28. This may lead observers to think these are no-cost items. In fact, Action Item 8 totalled $15 million and Item 9 totaled $16.9 million. Item 28, a 5-year renewal for Mastery Shoemaker, will cost the District a minimum of $50 million. The Board has a duty to inform the public of how they are spending public funds.