Glen Oak School Neighborhood Impact Zone adopted

For those who think the City isn’t doing enough to support District 150 schools, take a look at the Neighborhood Impact Zone that was adopted as part of the Comprehensive Plan Tuesday night. This was a collaborative effort of the City, School District, neighbors surrounding Glen Oak School, and Tri-County Regional Planning, led by Third District Councilman Bob Manning and At-Large Councilman George Jacob. You can download a PDF of the zone/plan from the city’s website.

Here’s what I found most impressive: it includes measurement and follow-up. They’ve set incremental four-year goals for homeownership, crime reduction, neighborhood satisfaction, business retention, infrastructure improvement, community involvement, and education. They measured all these before the plan was adopted so they had a baseline from which to evaluate changes from year to year.

I hope that this type of planning effort is next applied to the area surrounding the new Harrison school, as it could certainly benefit from a focused effort to improve all the items on the measurement list.

Kudos to the City, which has really gone the extra mile to improve this area. Although I’m still disappointed that the school district felt it necessary to purchase (for $3.2 million) and tear down three blocks of housing stock, an historic school building, and local business structures in order to build a suburban-style mega-campus, I applaud the fact that at least they stayed centrally-located in the neighborhood and are willing to open up the campus and building as a community center.

More debt for District 150

I heard about this late last night:

The School Board on Tuesday approved seeking $14 million in tax-anticipation warrants, amounting essentially to a short-term loan, and spending tax money – now some $30 million – usually reserved for next year’s operations.

“We don’t have cash on hand to pay bills in a timely fashion,” said Brock Butts, a former longtime Tremont school superintendent recently hired as District 150’s interim controller, citing “concerns” of meeting payroll next week….

“In the future, we are going to have to do one of three things,” [Interim Treasurer Norm] Durflinger said. “One, significantly cut expenditures; two, significantly increase revenues; and the most likely is the third, which is both.

Hello, higher taxes.