October 2013 Newsletter
PA Welcomes New Organizer: Garrett Dixon
People’s Alliance is pleased to announce Garrett Dixon has accepted the position of Chapter Organizer! Garrett is a Raleigh native and has a BA in Government from Cornell University. His thesis project was in transit oriented design practices. He brings a wealth of political experience to the position. In 2011, Garrett served as a Field Organizer with the Wake County Coordinated Campaign in support of the Wake County School Board and successfully won five out of five school board races removing Tea Party control from the board. In 2012 he served as Research Coordinator for the North Carolina Democratic Party, Bob Etheridge’s statewide Field Director, and GOTV Organizer with Obama For America.
People’s Alliance is pleased to announce Garrett Dixon has accepted the position of Chapter Organizer! Garrett is a Raleigh native and has a BA in Government from Cornell University. His thesis project was in transit oriented design practices. He brings a wealth of political experience to the position. In 2011, Garrett served as a Field Organizer with the Wake County Coordinated Campaign in support of the Wake County School Board and successfully won five out of five school board races removing Tea Party control from the board. In 2012 he served as Research Coordinator for the North Carolina Democratic Party, Bob Etheridge’s statewide Field Director, and GOTV Organizer with Obama For America.
July Newsletter
From filling buses headed to Raleigh for Moral Monday to working for Economic Equality in the City tax code, PA is hard at work pushing for our progressive values in our community and state. Continue reading for updates on our Action Teams, important meeting dates, and more. Have a PA story to tell for our next newsletter? Let us know!
Our Schools, Our Voices, Our Vision
Join People's Alliance, Durham Association of Educators, Public Schools First NC and People's Durham for a community forum focused on taking action. Teachers, parents and students will work together to discuss visions and strategies for protecting and strengthening our public schools. RSVP on Facebook.
PA Newsletter - April/May 2013
Click here for the People's Alliance latest newsletter newsletter. April/May news includes important upcoming dates, Housing Action, and updates on PA and Durham CAN priorities.
Newsletter February/March 2013
What a Difference a Decade Makes! Read a message from our PA Co-Presidents, take our member survey and read about upcoming committee work.
PA Hosts Durham Public Schools Budget Review
The PA Education Committee will sponsor a community meeting to discuss the DPS budget on Thursday, Sept. 20 at 7 pm. at the King's Daughters Inn - 204 N Buchanan Blvd. Durham Public Schools Chief Financial Officer, Carolyn Oliveraz, will join us.
See our FLYER. Please join us, and let others know! Click for Facebook invitation.
See our FLYER. Please join us, and let others know! Click for Facebook invitation.
Expectations for Charter Schools in Durham County
PA hosted a community panel discussion on March 7th to learn more about Charters in Durham and NC. Our members then voted on a list of expectations for Charter schools in Durham. Below is the final document that PA supports. Click here for a printer friendly file.
Expectations for Charter Schools in Durham County
Charters are public schools, funded with federal, state and local taxes. Charters should be accountable and transparent to the public.
In Durham, charter schools currently serve about 9% of children in our community. Durham currently has 9 charters and expects many more applications in the future. We are concerned about the lack of diversity and openness we see developing in some of Durham’s charter schools. The Durham People’s Alliance believes that all charters in Durham, like Durham Public Schools, should be inclusive institutions, open to all and serving all children. There should be no barriers to entry for any child since charters are funded by taxpayers’ money.
Durham Public Schools serve thousands of children in poverty. We are concerned that the failure of some charter schools to help educate these children will result in a two-tiered system of public education in Durham‚ one serving predominantly poor African-American and Hispanic children who are de facto discouraged from attending some charters; the other serving predominantly white middle-class children and children of color who have the resources to negotiate the barriers to charter school entry. Specifically, we believe that all charter schools in Durham should eliminate barriers to entry and practice transparency and accountability.
Each of them should:
1. Provide free and reduced price breakfasts and lunches, that meet federal nutrition guidelines, for students who need them.
2. Provide safe, reliable, free transportation services for students within Durham County.
3. Ensure that there are no barriers to admittance such as placement exams, teacher recommendations, auditions, or course prerequisites.
4. Ensure that there are no barriers to participation such as frequent early release days, or fees for extended day, athletics, or extracurricular activities.
5. Ensure that parents, while encouraged to, are not required to, volunteer, attend meetings, or make donations so that they and their children cannot participate in the school.
6. Ensure that the schedule of the school, including access to before and after school care, is appropriate for working families with school-age children.
7. Conduct outreach for the charter that clearly demonstrates a desire to serve all in the community, including media in Spanish, open houses in a variety of communities and advertising geared to all groups.
8. Advertise for and provide services to special needs students, including students with significant disabilities, in accordance with the federal law.
9. Advertise for and provide services to ESL students, homeless, migrant, and undocumented children.
10. Set up a local third party grievance and appeal process for families who feel pressured to leave the school. Information regarding student discipline and suspension policies must be provided to all parents.
11. Provide to the public the number of students that leave the charter during the school year, by month, with the reason for the withdrawal of the student. Individual student privacy must be upheld.
12. Ensure that the schools are secular and that separation of state and church is upheld in all interactions with students and their families and in the curriculum.
13. Provide to the Durham County Commissioners an annual operating budget that explains the use of local tax dollars with respect to the total charter school budget.
14. Be locally governed, non-profit, and not managed by a for-profit entity.
15. Serve a student population and make efforts to employ a faculty that mirrors the student demographics in the county.
16. Innovate in ways that are different from what is offered in existing local and charter schools. Best practices and the challenge of poverty should be shared in a spirit of collaboration with local educational institutions.
Expectations for Charter Schools in Durham County
Charters are public schools, funded with federal, state and local taxes. Charters should be accountable and transparent to the public.
In Durham, charter schools currently serve about 9% of children in our community. Durham currently has 9 charters and expects many more applications in the future. We are concerned about the lack of diversity and openness we see developing in some of Durham’s charter schools. The Durham People’s Alliance believes that all charters in Durham, like Durham Public Schools, should be inclusive institutions, open to all and serving all children. There should be no barriers to entry for any child since charters are funded by taxpayers’ money.
Durham Public Schools serve thousands of children in poverty. We are concerned that the failure of some charter schools to help educate these children will result in a two-tiered system of public education in Durham‚ one serving predominantly poor African-American and Hispanic children who are de facto discouraged from attending some charters; the other serving predominantly white middle-class children and children of color who have the resources to negotiate the barriers to charter school entry. Specifically, we believe that all charter schools in Durham should eliminate barriers to entry and practice transparency and accountability.
Each of them should:
1. Provide free and reduced price breakfasts and lunches, that meet federal nutrition guidelines, for students who need them.
2. Provide safe, reliable, free transportation services for students within Durham County.
3. Ensure that there are no barriers to admittance such as placement exams, teacher recommendations, auditions, or course prerequisites.
4. Ensure that there are no barriers to participation such as frequent early release days, or fees for extended day, athletics, or extracurricular activities.
5. Ensure that parents, while encouraged to, are not required to, volunteer, attend meetings, or make donations so that they and their children cannot participate in the school.
6. Ensure that the schedule of the school, including access to before and after school care, is appropriate for working families with school-age children.
7. Conduct outreach for the charter that clearly demonstrates a desire to serve all in the community, including media in Spanish, open houses in a variety of communities and advertising geared to all groups.
8. Advertise for and provide services to special needs students, including students with significant disabilities, in accordance with the federal law.
9. Advertise for and provide services to ESL students, homeless, migrant, and undocumented children.
10. Set up a local third party grievance and appeal process for families who feel pressured to leave the school. Information regarding student discipline and suspension policies must be provided to all parents.
11. Provide to the public the number of students that leave the charter during the school year, by month, with the reason for the withdrawal of the student. Individual student privacy must be upheld.
12. Ensure that the schools are secular and that separation of state and church is upheld in all interactions with students and their families and in the curriculum.
13. Provide to the Durham County Commissioners an annual operating budget that explains the use of local tax dollars with respect to the total charter school budget.
14. Be locally governed, non-profit, and not managed by a for-profit entity.
15. Serve a student population and make efforts to employ a faculty that mirrors the student demographics in the county.
16. Innovate in ways that are different from what is offered in existing local and charter schools. Best practices and the challenge of poverty should be shared in a spirit of collaboration with local educational institutions.
Special Membership Meeting - March 7th
The lifting of the NC cap on charter schools has brought charter schools to the forefront of the education debate. A special membership meeting has been called to provide PA members with information about current NC charter law. It will include a discussion about the pros and cons of charter schools for North Carolina. The membership will be voting on a set of expectations for Durham Charter Schools, which has been crafted by the PA Education Committee with the support of the Coordinating Committee. Click Here for the proposed set of expectations.
Wednesday, March 7th
7:00 p.m.
The Kings Daughters Inn
204 N. Buchanan Blvd.
PA Education Committee Partners With Local Education Groups for Movie Screening
People's Alliance is partnering with local education groups for a screening of the documentary The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman. Made by teachers and community activists, this documentary challenges the assumptions behind the education reform movement and the film Waiting for Superman.
Join us on Sunday, February 19th at 2:30 p.m. at the North Regional Library (221 Milton Rd.) for this special screening, followed by a discussion about problems and solutions in our community.
Click Here for Event Flyer. Please help us spread the word!
Join us on Sunday, February 19th at 2:30 p.m. at the North Regional Library (221 Milton Rd.) for this special screening, followed by a discussion about problems and solutions in our community.
Click Here for Event Flyer. Please help us spread the word!