The Emeryville Tattler

The Emeryville commons, from the residents' perspective

Sunday, June 30, 2013

School District: Won't Build Bike/Pedestrian Path, "Too Late"

Pool Deck & Rapists Are Out, 
Now it's the Running Track
and the Cost

Bike/Ped Path Can't Be Built Because......

Opinion
First the Emery Unified School District told us that they can't construct a required bike/pedestrian path adjacent to the school at the incipient Center of Community Life because the path would constrict an existing pool deck to such an extent as to render the pool useless and besides the path would be crawling with pedophiles and drug dealers waiting to prey on the children they told us.  Now they're telling us there's no room for the path because it would constrict a proposed running track at the school.  Oh and they forgot to mention earlier, they say they can't afford to build the path anyway.

Emeryville City Councilwoman
Jennifer West:

Now we know the pool 

deck argument was a 
School District ruse
The flip flop by the School District was revealed Tuesday when Emeryville's Bicycle Pedestrian Committee held a special field trip meeting at the site of the required path.
The School District had repeatedly told the people of Emeryville the pool deck was too small to shave away even a little to make room for the bike path (called the ECCL Path) but as the committee members Tuesday saw for themselves how truly large the existing pool deck really is, suddenly the School District Staff members and School Board members attending the meeting switched tactics and told the Committee members now it's the running track that 's going to be too cramped to accommodate the bike/ped path.
Council member Jennifer West, noting the reversal took the opportunity to look on the bright side, "The good news is at least now we don't have to worry about the pool deck any longer" she told the attendees.

The pool deck issue settled, the assembled School District staff and School Board members are now turned their focus on the yet to be built running track at the future school; there's simply no room for the bike/ped path they took pains to reveal at the Tuesday meeting.  The ECCL Path will take away two lanes rendering the track useless they said but left unmentioned was the fact that the School District selected the San Pablo Avenue site for the Center of Community Life years ago and they designed the whole site including the track with afore knowledge that the ECCL Path would have to be located there.  After the site was selected, it should be noted, the District went into attack mode against any naysayers who claimed the site was too small.
At this late date, with the design set in stone, the ECCL Path cannot be built, it's too late and the site cannot be redesigned said Mark Seiberlich, chief architect for the Center of Community Life,  "The [bike/ped] path takes up too much space and we must remove two track lanes" he added.

School District architect
Mark Seiberlich:

It's too late to redesign...
"The bike/ped path takes up
too much space"
 
After disparaging comments from the School Superintendent Debbra Lindo, excoriating the Bike/Ped Committee for their recalcitrance on this path,  one Committee member, exasperated by such talk told the assembled throng because of a lack of planning on the part of the District, "we're now being made to feel guilty for throwing the children under the bicycles wheels".  The idea was floated that the running track would be built whole now but two lanes of it would be removed later with the possible inclusion of the bike/ped path when the District builds out phase 2 of the project, but the idea was summarily rejected by Committee members as not credible.

Amid a plethora of challenging questions from disbelieving Bike/Ped Committee members, School Board member Josh Simon moved the conversation away from the intractable running track issue.  After suggesting there might be a yet to be revealed way to fit a bike/ped path in,  he lamented the high cost of the ECCL Path.  Mr Simon told the meeting attendees that the School District was not going to build the ECCL path during 'phase 1' construction of the Center of Community Life but perhaps a path could be build during phase 2, someday in the future.
But it's the high cost of building the required path that's got the School Board vexed he told the Committee members, "The reason we pushed the ECCL Path into phase 2 is the cost" Board member Simon said.  Emeryville residents will remember this School Board said the amount of money the District can raise through selling bonds is enough to build the whole Center of Community Life, an "exceptional" community facility they assured us.

This required bike/ped path really has the Emery School District grasping at straws.  After pleading with the Planning Commission and the City Council to reject the path by telling lies about the size of the pool deck and raising the specter of looming rapists and drug dealers, now they're pivoting and delivering this running track poppycock.  Their performance drew the ire of former School Board President Cheryl Webb who attended the meeting, "disingenuous" she said of the staff and Board members.
Former  School Board
President (resigned)
Cheryl Webb:

The District is
"disingenuous"

After showing us they have no compunction about lying to the people of Emeryville, this School District is now preparing to build a school and community center at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars.  It's not inspiring a lot of confidence. Emeryville taxpayers would be right to be concerned.
But the School District doesn't have a choice about this path; they are required to build it.  It's the expressed will of the people of Emeryville as revealed by our award winning General Plan and as specifically codified by the City Council's ruling after hearing the School District's lamentable case against the path.
It should also be noted the General Plan says the Center of Community Life is a "pedestrian priority zone".  And so now is the time to build it, when the Center of Community Life is being built, now, not perhaps if Josh Simon can figure a way to do it at some unspecified later date.

We grow tired of all the chicanery and outright lies from this District about this issue.  It's been a litany; the bogus claim of the too small pool deck from District architect Roy Miller, the rapists and drug dealers, the cost and now this absurd claim the running track will be negatively impacted.  This School District, we now know, purposely designed this Center of Community Life behind closed doors over the years without the required bike/ped path.  Any talk now about it being too late is insulting to the people of Emeryville.  We remind the School District that they need to build this school and community center for ALL the stakeholders in the community, including the bicyclists and the pedestrians.  Once again, absurdly, this District and this School Board shows us they don't know the meaning of community as they build the Center of Community Life.

Brian Donahue at 3:23 PM 6 comments:

Emeryville Summer Concert Series

From the Emeryville Community Services Department:


Brian Donahue at 3:08 PM No comments:

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Pat O'Keeffe, Former Emeryville City Manager Moves to Albany

From the Contra Costa Times:

Albany makes interim city manager choice
By Damin Esper
Correspondent
Posted:   06/26/2013 01:35:30 PM PDT
Updated:   06/26/2013 01:35:30 PM PDT



ALBANY -- The city has decided to enter talks with recently retired Emeryville City Manager Patrick O'Keeffe to serve in the same capacity here on an interim basis. Albany's position will open in August when Beth Pollard is scheduled to retire.
The council voted to enter negotiations with O'Keeffe in closed session at its June 17 meeting.
O'Keeffe, 60, retired from Emeryville in April after serving as city manager for seven years. He also served as that city's Economic Development and Housing Director for 11 years. Before coming to Emeryville he led the redevelopment program in El Cerrito.
O'Keeffe could not be reached before deadline. In an interview with the website evilleeye.com when he stepped down, he said he planned on doing consulting for local government.
"A combination of filling in as an interim manager where needed, economic development, and affordable housing," O'Keeffe said. "So a continuation of my career with less time spent in night meetings, more freedom to schedule my day, a bit more time to work on my tennis game."
O'Keeffe also said, "Pro-business and pro-developer is a reputation I am glad to wear. Seventy percent of the cost of the services the residents enjoy are paid for by business. Tax revenues from new development are the reason why we are in good financial condition.
He is quoted as saying Emeryville could not have built parks, the child development and senior centers, the civic center, fire station, and rehabilitated the police station "without the revenues that resulted from new development."

O'Keeffe told the website his proudest accomplishments in Emeryville included improvements on Bay Street, the Emeryville Center of Community Life project, and helping the city emerge from the recession with a balanced budget and an "A" credit rating.
The Albany council also voted to enter into a $30,000 contract with Berkeley Food and Housing Project (BFHP) for outreach and engagement with homeless people in the city, specifically on the Albany Bulb.
The council, as part of plans to turn over the waterfront property to the East Bay Regional Park District, had previously voted to enforce the city's overnight camping ban beginning in October after completing an outreach project.
A city staff report said BHFP set out several goals for the contract, including developing short-term interim housing solutions and working with individual homeless people to develop a housing stabilization plan for each person seeking to be permanently housed. The BHFP will work closely with Solano Community Church.
The council also reviewed a draft of the budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year. The budget will be voted on at the July 1 meeting. The budget anticipates a 6.2 percent increase in revenues to $14.3 million. Expenditures will increase 4.3 percent to $18 million.
The difference is covered by operating transfers.
Brian Donahue at 8:00 AM 1 comment:

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Former Emeryville School Superintendent Faces Charges of Witness Tampering

Former Emery schools superintendent Tony Smith is being sued for coercing an Oakland Schools Police Officer to make false statements to Oakland Police about an officer shooting last year.  The story was covered by the Tattler on June 2nd.  In June, Mr Smith resigned as Oakland's School Superintendent suddenly and has left the state, citing pressing and private family matters.   

From the Oakland Tribune:


Lawsuit claims Oakland school district leaders interfered in police shooting investigation
By David DeBolt ddebolt@bayareanewsgroup.com
Posted:   06/25/2013 03:35:26 PM PDT
Updated:   06/26/2013 06:19:07 AM PDT

OAKLAND -- An Oakland schools police sergeant filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday claiming district leaders pressured him to change his statements about an incident in which his partner shot and killed a 20-year-old man outside a high school dance in 2011.
Additionally, the lawsuit alleges the district retaliated against Sgt. Jonathan Bellusa for filing written complaints against his superiors, including one charging that an Oakland schools police chief hurled racial slurs and threatened to kill officers in a drunken rant.
Lawyers for Bellusa announced the civil rights lawsuit against the district and outgoing Superintendent Anthony Smith in a news release issued Tuesday.
The suit centers around conflicting accounts of an incident on Jan. 22, 2011, in which Bellusa and Sgt. Barhin Bhatt conducted a traffic stop on 20-year-old Raheim Brown, who was parked with the car's hazard lights on, near a Skyline High School dance.
The stop quickly turned deadly. According to reports at the time, Bhatt said he saw Brown stabbing at Bellusa with a screwdriver; district officials later said Bellusa, the commanding officer, then ordered Bhatt to shoot Brown, fatally wounding him.
In his lawsuit, Bellusa said Superintendent Smith and General Counsel Jacqueline Minor interrupted his statements to police, and officials later tried to "coerce Bellusa to conform his testimony to the version proffered by Bhatt."
According to Bellusa's version, he was struggling over the screwdriver with Brown when Bhatt fired two shots at Brown, allowing Bellusa to move away from Brown and the screwdriver. Bhatt then reloaded and fired more bullets into Brown, the lawsuit says.
Former Oakland & Emeryville
Schools Chief  Tony Smith

Though the Alameda County District Attorney's Office declined to file criminal charges and district lawyers said the action did not violate any policies or practices, the shooting of Brown was believed to be the impetus for a federal grand jury investigation. The U.S. Department of Justice notified the district about the investigation in May 2012.
The district has its own police force, which includes about a dozen sworn police officers patrolling the district's 100 schools.
Bellusa was put on medical leave in September 2011 and remains on unpaid administrative leave.
He claims he was a target for retaliation for filing a written complaint against then-Oakland Unified School District Police Chief Pete Sarna for a racist rant against fellow officers. Sarna later resigned.
District spokesman Troy Flint said district leaders did talk to Bellusa and Bhatt after the shooting in front of Oakland police department officers but in no way tried to influence their statements.
"Belussa is rather unscrupulously trying to claim whistleblower status to mask other issues related to his employment at the department," Flint said. "If this case goes to trial, which actually would be quite refreshing so the facts could come out, more detail would come out. Belussa himself has been known to engage in the behavior he is accusing Sarna of."

Brian Donahue at 6:43 PM 2 comments:

Monday, June 24, 2013

Letter to the Tattler: For Aya Nakano

The following letter was received for posting from an anonymous citizen regarding murdered Emeryville resident 22 year old Aya Nakano:  


Justice for Aya Nakano!
Reward of $35,000 (All tips will remain confidential!)

To the community, please help us apprehend these criminals.  Follow-up & keep Aya's story alive! The criminals cannot be left out on the streets prowling on innocent victims!
Summary of incident:
WHEN: June 12, 2013 at approximately 10:57 PM
WHERE: 5800 block of Market Street corner of Stanford Ave. Oakland, CA (facing southbound in the vicinity of Trung Hand Car Wash & ASA Liquor Store)
Aya was driving back to his home from the Cal Rec Center, when his silver Jeep Cherokee was rear-ended by the suspect vehicle driven by 2 occupants. The occupants in the sedan fatally shot Aya.
The suspect vehicle is described as a newer, silver 4-door sedan with a possible front-end damage.
There is a $35,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.
Former Emeryville
resident Aya Nakano
Please call:
CRIME STOPPERS 1800-222-TIPS
(510) 777-8572
Oakland PD Homicide (510)238-3821
E-mail: oaklandhomicide@oaklandnet.com

Previous Tattler stories on this unfortunate incident can be seen HERE and HERE
Brian Donahue at 7:11 PM No comments:

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Racism Charged at Bay Street Mall

From the New York based on-line Sikh oriented website Sikh 24:


Breaking: Sacramento Sikh Family Harassed by Security at AMC Emeryville

SACRAMENTO, California (June 23, 2013)–A Sacramento based Sikh and his wife were harassed by the AMC Emeryville security and management earlier today.  Manjot Singh had gone to the theater with his wife to watch a movie when he was pulled aside by the manager for his appearance.
Manjot Singh told Sikh24 that he was pulled out because of his Sikh appearance and when the security guards asked about his kirpan, hidden under his t-shirt, they gave him a hard time and harassed him in public.
The kirpan is a Sikh article of faith accepted in public places worldwide, including England and Canada.  Sikhs also keep unshorn hair and wear turbans as a requirement of their faith.
Singh alleged that such an incident shocked him as it happened in front of the public where he was made to look like a terrorist.  Sikhs have been victims of hate crimes in America since the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center.  Sikhs are members of a peace loving religion founded 500 years ago in Punjab, now located in Northern India.
“To me, the kirpan represents my duty to protect others–at any cost. It is a physical representation of my moral duty to uphold the honor of others. To be singled out and reminded that I am a second class citizen and not really American, even though I was born and raised here…is painful,” said Singh.
A petition has been started on Change.org demanding AMC CEO Gerardo Lopez stop banning Sikhs.  A campaign has already spurred on various social media websites demanding an apology from AMC.

Brian Donahue at 7:56 PM 1 comment:

Friday, June 21, 2013

No Change For AC Transit Bus Line in Emeryville


Former Emeryville mayor and current AC Transit President of the Board of Directors Greg Harper has announced the F-Line bus route will not be eliminated or even change for Emeryville residents as was reported last week in the newspaper the Daily Californian.  Mr Harper told the Tattler, "the Daily Californian got the story wrong" and that the Board is actually increasing the number of buses for the popular route.
AC Transit President and
Emeryville resident
Greg Harper

The Daily Californian reported and the Tattler reprinted a story that is factually incorrect according to Mr Harper. The UC Cal newspaper reported the transit agency is considering changing the F-Line route through Emeryville but that is incorrect Mr Harper said, "It will continue to use 40th Street and access the Bay Bridge via Powell Street".  There will be no changes for the Emeryville portion of the F-Line except buses will run with greater frequency he stressed.  Mr Harper noted that the proposed change will occur at the UC campus where the line now loops around the campus.  The loop will be eliminated and instead the buses will just run past the university, "90% of the total route is the same" he noted.  "It won't go around the campus as much as it did before.  But that will enable us to increase the frequency with the same number of buses" he said.  "There will be a 10 minute peak bus frequency for weekdays" he added, noting he is trying to convince his fellow Board members to accept that half the buses should go down Powell Street, owing to the greater frequency, "Every other bus will go down Powell instead of 40th Street if I can get that past my colleagues" he said.
The addition of an F-Line Powell Street route, closer to Emeryville residencies, would increase usability for Emeryville citizens.
These changes would make the F-Line "better than ever as far as Emeryville is concerned" President Harper said,  "The downside is that will be less convenient for some UC students" he added.

Former mayor Greg Harper heads up Harper and Associates law firm on Horton Street and he has lived in Emeryville for over 30 years.
Brian Donahue at 4:28 PM 2 comments:

RULE Meeting

From RULE:
Residents United For A Livable Emeryville
Meet your progressive neighbors and participate in making Emeryville a more livable city
Next regular meeting:  Saturday, June 22

10:00 - 12:00
 
5514 Doyle St., Community Room, 1st floor
Facilitator:  Scott Donahue
Agenda:
  
RULE
's sponsorship of the Open Government Initiative (planning our signature drive)  If you want to do something to make our city government more responsive to the residents and more transparent, here is an opportunity!

Meet two candidates for the Emeryville Planning commission:  Scott Donahue and Brad Gunkel


Bring breakfast snacks
Coffee and tea provided.  Come and meet your progressive neighbors and help make your city grow in a good way!
Please submit additional agenda items via return email

For more information contact Judy Timmel, 510-601-6521 or reply to this email
Brian Donahue at 7:52 AM No comments:

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Community Schools Concept: Hopes & Challenges

From the Center for Investigative Reporting comes a story about 'community schools', a new idea among the educational elite to replace the former and polar opposite 'small schools' idea.  Emeryville has delved into the community schools idea headfirst with the soon to be built Center of Community Life and now Oakland will be testing the new model.

Oakland district embraces community schools model in ambitious reform plan  

Jun 17, 2013
  • Trey Bundy

    The Center for Investigative Reporting
  • Sarah Butrymowicz

    The Hechinger Report
Daniel Hurst, who until the end of this school year was the principal 
of Fremont High School in Oakland, Calif., discusses his district's 
approach to community schooling. The Oakland Unified School District 
has started a campaign for full-service community schools, equipped 
with staff trained to support students’ social, emotional and 
health needs, as well as their academic growth.
Credit: Noah Berger/For The Center for Investigative Reporting

Sitting behind his desk at Fremont High School in Oakland, Calif., Principal Daniel Hurst fiddled with a plastic cigar wrapper he had confiscated from a student.“They take the cigar paper and fill it with weed,” he said.  Hurst knows Fremont’s problems well: He joined the school 28 years ago as a teacher. Two years ago, he said, a teacher was robbed at gunpoint before the first bell. “The school gets regularly burglarized,” he added. “Teachers’ cars get broken into. Laptops and cellphones get stolen.”
Fremont’s campus in gang-entrenched East Oakland is three blocks away from International Boulevard, famous for its booming sex trade. The school is known for abysmal test scores and low graduation rates. In the 2011-12 school year, it had the most suspensions of any school in Oakland, according to school officials. Many local families have had enough. Of roughly 600 possible freshmen living in the neighborhood this year, about 200 chose to attend Fremont. Even those who do register often leave.
“There’s a perception of violence and safety issues and marijuana use,” said Nidya Baez, a Fremont graduate who is now an administrator at the school. “We constantly have kids transferring out.”
Fremont’s problems might be extreme, but other schools in the Oakland Unified School District are suffering as well. Enrollment in traditional Oakland public schools has plummeted by more than 16,000 students since 2000, according to district officials, as foreclosures have forced families out of the city and charter schools have siphoned off students. During the same period, the district has cycled through six superintendents and narrowly avoided bankruptcy only through a state takeover that ended in 2009.
Now, under growing public pressure to improve student safety and achievement, the district is attempting to reinvent itself by turning its 87 schools – including Fremont – into what are known as “full-service community schools,” equipped with staff trained to support students’ social, emotional and health needs, as well as their academic growth.
The concept is one that has been around for decades but is now gaining traction in districts across the U.S. as other reform efforts run up against problems related to poverty. The embracing of community schools is a stark shift from the “no-excuses” movement, which held that schools should be able to push all students to success no matter what their background. That idea dominated education reform for much of the past decade.
Community schools are just the opposite. At its core, the concept represents an explicit acknowledgement that problems with a child’s home life must be addressed to help the student succeed academically.
“There’s actually a lot of agreement that we need to work on both improving schools and addressing poverty,” said Michael Petrilli, executive vice president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservative education think tank based in Ohio and Washington, D.C. “Particularly, as reformers get into the work of trying to run schools and make the system work better, they see in black and white just how important addressing the larger social problems is.”
Marty Blank, director of the nonprofit Coalition for Community Schools, which connects organizations and school districts doing community school work, estimates that at least 50 school districts around the country are launching similar initiatives. Chicago is home to more than 175 community schools. Portland, Ore., has 67 and Tulsa, Okla., 31. New York City, with the nation’s largest school system, has 21 community schools, and that number might grow soon, depending on this year’s mayoral election; the United Federation of Teachers is pushing for the city’s next mayor to adopt the strategy.
Fremont High 3 - StudentsClick for larger image
Students gather during the lunch period at Fremont High School. To combat fighting on campus, the school has started a program called Upstanders Challenge. When students stop a fight from occurring, the whole campus gets an extra 20 minutes for lunch the following Friday.
Credit: Noah Berger/For The Center for Investigative Reporting
There’s no one model for community schools. Advocates say each school reflects the particular needs of its students and parents. The goal is to handle whatever issues students bring to school that might affect learning: trauma, abuse, neglect, violence, gang tensions, immigration problems and a wide range of other physical, sexual and mental health issues.
“It’s so daunting,” said former Oakland Superintendent Tony Smith, who pushed for community schools when he took over the district four years ago, just as the state takeover was ending. He saw community schools as the most promising model for grappling with the intergenerational problems students face in a city that had an 11.8 percent unemployment rate in March and the highest violent crime rate in California.
In most places, individual schools adopt the model. Smith’s goal of transforming the entire district makes it among the nation’s most ambitious efforts. (Smith unexpectedly resigned his post in April to help care for an ailing family member in Chicago. The district has named Gary Yee, a veteran Oakland school board member, as Smith’s interim replacement. Officials say they plan to continue developing community schools throughout the district over the next three years.)
District officials say that 27 schools have a designated employee to coordinate the implementation of the community schools initiative and that the goal is to turn every school in the district into a community school. Some schools say they haven’t seen any changes yet.
Despite the district’s ambitions, the community schools efforts seem, at times, like a piecemeal attempt to increase services without any dedicated funding. With little federal or state money available specifically for community schools, Oakland has spent much of the $40 million it has won in competitive public grants during the past five years on services to help students with nonacademic problems.
Money to support community schools now comes from a combination of private fundraising and collaborations between individual schools and Bay Area nonprofits that provide services to students. These partnerships vary; sometimes nonprofits foot the bill, and other times, the school does. The district also has reworked its budget, in part by consolidating and closing schools, to have an administrator, like Fremont High’s Baez, at many schools to coordinate these efforts.
“There will never be enough money coming into public schools to accomplish this,” said Curtiss Sarikey, Oakland’s associate superintendent for family, school and community partnerships. “We don’t have any illusions that we’re going to wait for any grant funding to make this real.”
Providing student resources
At the heart of many community school efforts are campus resource centers. Unlike traditional guidance offices, the centers are one-stop shops for any social, emotional or health need. Students can get confidential counseling from nurses, therapists and social workers or get referred to other organizations for help. Fremont’s center, which opened this school year, is called ASAP – for Academic Excellence, Social Responsibility, Accountability and Proactiveness. Students choose to drop in, or teachers can refer them when they’re having trouble in class. Fremont pays for two full-time employees at a total cost of about $75,000. Other mental health providers work in the center but are funded by Alameda County.
Hurst, who stepped down as principal at the end of this school year, said these new services have reduced suspensions, including a two-thirds drop in the number of ninth-graders kept out of class. But teachers give it mixed reviews. Some have complained that they send students to ASAP just to see them return quickly, along with their disruptive behavior. Many teachers are concerned – even angry – about their diminished power to suspend kids who keep other students from learning.
“That sentiment is going on, no question, to varying degrees with everybody,” Hurst said. “There’s a sense that punishment is needed.”
Inside the center on a school day last fall, an 18-year-old named Darrell checked in with counselors. Darrell said he did not want his last name to be used because he doesn’t want people to know he is seeking counseling. He has been a chronic truant, and it was his last day at Fremont. He didn’t want to leave but said he had no choice because he wouldn’t graduate on time unless he transferred to one of the district’s continuation schools, designed to help older students make up missing credits. Darrell said he would miss ASAP; there isn’t a similar center at his next school.
“If I’m having a rough day, I come through,” he said. “I’ve been trying to change my bad habits and be a better student.”
Darrell had some success in his English class at Fremont, which was based on community school principles and used literature to explore social and cultural differences. “It’s less like an academic situation and more like a family,” he said. “If we could get the whole school on that program, the whole community, it would be great.”
Some studies have shown that community schools can improve student performance. Cincinnati, one of the pioneers of the current community schools push, has seen higher test scores and graduation rates since beginning its Strive Together initiative in 2006.  Community schools in New York, Chicago and some California cities demonstrated improvement on test scores, better attendance and reduced dropout rates compared with traditional schools, according to the Coalition for Community Schools.
But the Fordham Institute’s Petrilli cautioned that the body of evidence supporting community schools is not yet conclusive.
“I think it’s worth trying,” he said. “But we certainly don’t have evidence that this is going to make a huge impact on student learning.”
Experimenting with new strategies
Oakland has a history of trying trendy strategies to cope with inner-city problems that spill into the classroom. In 2000, the district was one of many across the country to embrace the idea of breaking down large schools into smaller ones in order to nurture closer relationships between students and faculty, which would, in theory at least, improve academic performance.
Early signs of success – parent satisfaction and better test scores – led the district to extend the small-schools model into a citywide reform effort. Backed in part by a $9.5 million grant in 2004 from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a major supporter of small schools, the district closed a dozen large schools and opened 48 small ones in their place. (Disclosure: The Gates Foundation is among the supporters of The Hechinger Report.)
Fremont High 1 - BaezClick for larger image
Nidya Baez is the community school coordinator at Fremont High School. Her job is to help recruit and coordinate the work of community-based organizations to provide the help that students need.
Credit: Noah Berger/For The Center for Investigative Reporting
Fremont, with 1,862 students, was broken into five high schools. Nidya Baez, the Fremont administrator, who was a student at the time, was skeptical that small schools would help. “It doesn’t really matter how many schools there are if we’re still doing school wrong,” she said.
When Baez returned to Fremont to teach in 2007 after graduating from the University of California, Berkeley, her fears were proven. She found a campus full of disengaged students, an excess of administrators and a cumbersome bureaucracy.
Elsewhere in the district, there was some improvement. Oakland students in small schools had higher standardized test scores than those at large schools, and parents rated them as safer. But middle school and high school performance was still far below statewide goals.
Around the same time, national fervor for the small-school movement began to diminish as national studies showed mixed results. The Gates Foundation, which spent $2 billion from 2000 to 2009 to create small schools, stopped funding the movement in 2009 after admitting the strategy essentially had failed.
The Gates Foundation’s decision left Oakland with too many schools to run and not enough students to fill them. Last fall, the small high schools on Fremont’s campus were consolidated back into one large school. Schools at another high school campus also were merged into one, and five elementary schools were shut down, according to district officials.
When Smith, the superintendent, first began selling the community schools concept around the district in 2009, not everyone embraced his pitch. Hurst and two other principals went to Smith and spent hours arguing against the plan, fearing it would distract teachers from academics by placing such an emphasis on problems outside of school.
“They argued from a place of deep care and concern for kids,” Smith said. “But I said, ‘Is what we’re doing good enough?’ We had to figure out a way to make it better and do it for everyone.”
Hurst eventually agreed that the community schools concept was worth trying. Providing intensive services, he said, is more likely to improve learning than merely punishing bad behavior. 
“In the past, we just dealt with behavior,” he said. “But when you do that, it will happen again and again.” Still, he understands that it’s not reasonable to expect quick results. “If you’re dealing with the fundamental cause behind the behavior, it’s going to take some time to see movement on that,” he said.
Baez is hopeful. She said she managed to get a decent education at Fremont, but she remembered that many top students transferred to better high schools. Her job at Fremont now is to help recruit and coordinate the work of community-based organizations to provide the help that students need. “A lot of the services were not here last year, so we just suspended students,” she said. “We needed a way to triage students and figure out what’s up with them.”
Safety on campus
One of the biggest problems is that students don’t feel safe at the school. Even if they are not directly involved in violence, they often are witnesses to it. Baez remembers a morning last year when a group of students from another high school showed up with baseball bats to face off against some students at Fremont. Although no one was seriously injured, she said, punches were thrown and campus staff had to break it up.
Sandra Muniz, Fremont’s 17-year-old student body vice president, said young people in East Oakland are inundated with violence and gang culture from an early age. It’s a culture that breeds distrust of authority figures, even those who just want to help, she said. “Kids in Oakland have that mentality – don’t ask questions, don’t get so close,” she said. “With family and friends, I can let my guard down. In the streets, it’s always up.” 
Fighting on campus has been a major problem. To combat it, the school this year started a program called Upstanders Challenge. When students stop a fight from occurring, the whole campus gets an extra 20 minutes for lunch the following Friday. This happened at least a dozen times in this past semester, Baez said.
“Last year, there was a carnival atmosphere around fights with kids standing around and cheering,” Hurst said. “We still have these fights, but the kids are breaking them up before the adults even get there.”
While Fremont’s community school rollout is well underway, other schools have yet to see any changes. Those involved with community school efforts around the country stressed that communication and collaboration are crucial to launching a successful initiative. While Oakland is attempting to roll out the program across the whole district, many started in a small number of schools before expanding.
“You just have to go slowly. You can’t do it all in a day,” said Ellen Pais, president and CEO of the Los Angeles Education Partnership, which helps run several community schools. But she praised Oakland’s ambition, adding that it “sends a great message about the vision that they have.”
At Oakland’s Cleveland Elementary School, in a quiet neighborhood near Lake Merritt, teacher Mary Loeser didn’t think the community schools concept changed much for her students; the school worked to fill in gaps on its own.
“Our PTA paid for a retired psychologist to work part time with our kids,” she said. “We have so many troubled children at this school – and this is a high-performing school. These children are in transition: divorce, immigrating, people moving around because of the economy.”
Abigail Griffin, the mother of three former Cleveland students and former president of the school’s PTA, also was frustrated. In April, Griffin and her family moved out of the district, in part because she was concerned about the quality of education in Oakland.
“No one (from the district) has come to do a needs assessment with us about what our families could use,” she said. “When I try to talk to anybody at OUSD and say, ‘Please meet with us and let’s discuss ways we can fix this,’ no one returns our calls.”
Curtiss Sarikey, the assistant superintendent, acknowledged the challenges of reaching every school and getting staff across the district to take part in the new approach. “We have a lot of work to do with communication,” he said, adding that posters have been put up in every school in the district advertising the initiative.
Sarikey came to Oakland in 2011 from the San Francisco Unified School District, where he worked on comprehensive student health programs. A former social worker, he moved to Oakland after hearing Smith talk about his plans for Oakland.
“Just halfway through the second year of implementation, we’ve actually exceeded some of our goals,” he said.
Principal reaches out
Sankofa Academy is one school that has managed to offer a range of crucial services without much help from the district and without dipping deeply into its own funds. A pre-K-8 school in North Oakland, Sankofa was almost closed four years ago before Principal Monique Brinson took over and began writing her own grant proposals and reaching out to nonprofits around the Bay Area for help. As a result, her school has two full-time mental health professionals from a neighboring children’s agency and two organizations running after-school tutoring and enrichment programs five days a week.
“We were doing this before it became the initiative of the district,” Brinson said. “And if you’re consistent, people want to work with you. There’s really no magic to it.”
Teacher and resource specialist Jonathan Hasak came to Sankofa three years ago. He also has worked at Peralta Elementary School, just five minutes away. While Peralta is one of the top-performing schools in the district, Sankofa has long struggled with high absenteeism and low test scores.
“The conversation at Peralta is, ‘What’s your favorite state?’ ” he said. “Here, you’re talking to kids who, what they’re sharing is, ‘I don’t know who my father is.’ ”
Hasak credits Brinson with wrangling the community organizations that now provide on-campus student services. “Otherwise, we wouldn’t have tutors, we wouldn’t have intervention people after school or a science program,” he said. “We just don’t have the money for it.”
Hasak, like many of his colleagues, says he believes progress will come from individual school sites. Despite a shoestring budget for support and enrichment programs, Sankofa’s Academic Performance Index, a statewide measure based on standardized test scores, has risen from 691 to 773 since 2009, according to state data. The index ranges from 200 to 1,000, with 800 as the state goal for schools.
Others in Oakland hope he’s right, especially now that Smith, the primary advocate for community schools, has stepped down. District spokesman Troy Flint called Smith a visionary, adding that he was leaving the district in good shape to see the community schools initiative through.
“I feel the staff at this point has a clear vision of what needs to be done,” he said. “I don’t think we feel adrift.”
Because of the financial crisis in California’s public schools, Hasak said, the administration ultimately has little power to turn around every school. “I don’t know what the district can do besides offer a vision for what type of school district we want to be.”
This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. Bundy is a reporter for the independent, nonprofit Center for Investigative Reporting, the country’s largest investigative reporting team.
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