May 19, 1999

Constance Newman
DCFRA
One Thomas Circle, NW Suite 900
Washington, DC 20005

Dear Ms. Newman:

We were very pleased with the pledge you made recently before the House D.C. Subcommittee to help overhaul the deeply flawed process for disposing of excess property in the DCPS system. Regrettably, the situation is even worse now than when we met with you in March. A recent change in the DCPS Realty Office has left several charter schools in need of immediate assistance and underscored the need to develop a sensible disposition policy as swiftly as possible.

As you know, turnover this year at the DCPS Realty Office has caused uncertainty and hardship for charter schools that have been forced to negotiate for DCPS property -- either because the schools opened in DCPS property with the understanding they would be able to renew short-term leases; or because (in the case of two new schools) they temporarily lack the resources to make other arrangements. Most of these schools reached agreements of varying degrees of formality some time ago, with different DCPS personnel. But several leases have still not been signed, and time is running out.

Two weeks ago, the Superintendent appointed Jerry Cook as the new director of the Realty Office. Mr. Cook has re-opened many of the questions that charter leaders thought were settled, apparently indicating that he would significantly raise leasing costs and, in one case, that a school would not be able to stay in its building. Mostdisturbingly, he has told charter school leaders that his primary goal is to maximize profits and that charters must lease at the market rate, not at a non-profit rate.

We urge you to do whatever you can to help these schools secure adequate facilities under reasonable terms. Hundreds of students will suffer if their schools must move to cramped quarters, spend money earmarked for academics to lease space, or even be forced to close.

In addition, the schools at risk have negotiated in good faith for extended periods of time. If any is allowed to fail for want of a building, when so many sit vacant, the public will have the right to wonder if D.C. government in general and the school system in particular have really become more responsive and trustworthy.

The most immediate concern is to help the schools that currently are in limbo, but a revamped disposition policy must be put in place by the fall in order to avoid the scramble for facilities that has characterized the last two years. When it comes to school buildings, we trust that you, like the public, disagree with Mr. Cook: profits are not the top priority, but neighborhoods and education. D.C.'s public charter schools already have rehabilitated a number of decaying school buildings, bringing new life to their neighborhoods and renewed hope to hundreds of families. If not prevented, the charter schools will rehabilitate a good number more.

We look forward to working with you to create a policy that benefits both the public charter schools and the District as a whole.

Sincerely,

 

Robert I. Cane
Acting Chair
D.C. Public Charter School Coalition

cc:

Anthony Williams
Kevin Chavous
Phil Mendelsohn
Kathy Patterson
Sharon Ambrose
Carol Schwartz
John Shumake
Robert Dix
Heidi Stirrup
John Albaugh
Frank Purcell
Rosalind Snowden


Friends of Choice in Urban Schools (FOCUS)
1530 16th Street, NW #001 ~ Washington, DC 20036
202-387-0405 | 202-667-3798
info@focus-dccharter.org