YorkCounts and York
County Community Foundation compliment the Chief Recovery Officer and the
School District Recovery Advisory Committee for their diligence in evaluating
options for the School District of the City of York.
After months of
research and evaluation, the Community Foundation submitted a report in
February to the Committee called A NewEducation Model for the City of York. The
report recommended that the school reform option with the best chance to
successfully transform the district would be the creation of a district-wide
system of community charter schools consisting of privately-run, high-performing
nonprofits that any child in the district could attend for free. The report recognized that keys to successful
reform were visionary leadership, commitment to evidence-based and
collaborative educational approaches, family and community engagement, rigorous
performance standards followed by accountability and rewards for results.
Last week, the
Community Foundation’s Board of Directors and its YorkCounts committee voted
unanimously to support the approved financial recovery plan for the School
District of the City of York because it recommends bold, comprehensive reform,
stronger and broader governance, rigorous performance measurements, increased
accountability and consequences for non-performance. Most importantly, the plan gives children a
much better chance at a higher quality of life.
The new plan for the
School District also gives York an exciting opportunity to re-engage the
community in supporting students. The
plan has a greater chance of success because it will be spearheaded by Chief
Recovery Officer David Meckley, a trusted leader who is strongly committed to
academic and financial improvement.
Superintendent Eric Holmes strengthens the leadership team by bringing
years of experience and commitment to students.
The proposed Community Education Council offers expanded oversight and
engagement by parents, teachers and community leaders working together to make
the city schools strong again. We
believe this new leadership will have the discipline needed to ensure academic
progress and hold schools accountable or make the decision to convert
non-performing schools to external education providers.
While the recovery
process has been challenging, it has generated out-of-the-box ideas that
otherwise may not have been debated. It
has also highlighted the fundamental flaws of the urban education system and
expanded awareness that profound change is needed. While the financial recovery plan merits our
investment of time and resources, long term solutions must include new
structures to generate revenue for schools in communities with a limited tax
base.
We encourage city
residents who are passionate about public education and willing to commit time
and energy to making it great to submit their name for consideration for the
Community Education Council that will oversee the financial recovery plan. If interested, contact the Chief Recovery
Officer at croyork@outlook.com. We also strongly encourage
education and business professionals to run for the York City School
Board. It will take a community effort
to set the school district on the road to recovery. Please join the effort.
Sincerely,
William R. Hartman Jane
M. Conover
President Vice-President,
Community Investment
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