Category Archives: Peoria Public Schools

East Bluff businesses want nothing to do with petition signing

Clare Jellick reports tonight:

The Boys and Girls Club has pulled out of letting a group of people use its space for a petition drive in support of a school at Glen Oak Park. […]

“We went to several places, and they said it was kind of controversial. They did not want to allow us to rent a space because of the subject matter,” said Bruce Morgan, who lives just south of the park on Frye Avenue.

I have the solution for our luckless “silent majority.” They can have their petition signing party on one of the properties the school district recently purchased on the corner of Frye and Prospect. I’m sure the school board wouldn’t mind. Plus, it would have these added benefits:

  • Reduction of depression and aggression in petition signers
  • Environment-based petition signing develops skills in problem solving, critical thinking, and decision making
  • Anecdotal evidence strongly suggests that signing petitions in natural surroundings stimulates creativity and activism
  • Ability to draw a better picture of a bee next to their names on the petition

The people behind this petition drive need to ask themselves, don’t their petition signers deserve the best environment for signing a petition? Can they really even consider anyplace else? It’s easy to get there — just one moderately busy street to cross. It will increase park attendance, and while they’re there, they can visit the zoo and botanical gardens.

“Silent majority” count so far: 30

The Journal Star’s “breaking news” department has a story on the rumored petition drive to reverse the Park Board’s decision on siting a new school in Glen Oak Park:

A group of neighbors across the street from Glen Oak Park are circulating a petition to get the Peoria Park Board to reconsider its rejection of a school there.

Teresa Larson, who feels “ashamed” she didn’t speak out sooner, said she and several of her neighbors have collected about 30 signatures this week.

So, there you go. The “silent majority” is finally speaking — a whopping 30 people! Of course, they live “across the street from Glen Oak Park,” so they’re some of the only people in the East Bluff who would be unaffected by putting the school in the park. It will be interesting to see how many residents from the rest of the Glen Oak attendance area sign the petition.

Considering this is the so-called “silent majority,” people should be lining up around the block to sign.

District 150 determined to not even consider Glen Oak School site

On WCBU radio this morning, the local news broadcast included a story on District 150 and their search for a Glen Oak/White replacement school site. School Board President David Gorenz was interviewed; he said that using the current Glen Oak School site would be “cost-prohibitive” even if they scaled back the size of the parcel they needed.

One wonders on what facts he bases that statement. Is that based on a complete teardown and rebuilding without first doing a “final review” of whether the current building could be renovated? Is that based on 10 acres? 5 acres? What configuration? Does it include selling the properties on Prospect (almost certainly at a loss) that the District bought prematurely? Does that include the $500,000 in City support that Bob Manning is still willing to ask the Council for if the District would come back to the negotiating table? Is it cost-prohibitive because they’re still trying to build a more-expensive “birth-through-eighth” school instead of a K-8 school?

The public is wearying of assumption-based School Board actions.

Current Journal Star not without its skeletons

There’s quite a bit of consternation about the prospect of someone like Dave Ransburg buying the paper. The fear, presumably, is that news stories that don’t fit the buyers’ agenda for Peoria will be suppressed. There’s fear that the new owner might not be “responsible,” thus compromising the paper’s integrity.

I share those fears, but this is partially a case of “better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” Is the current Journal Star pure of story suppression? Or do we just favor their known biases over the unknown biases of a rumored alliance of local businessmen (including Dave Ransburg) who may be trying to purchase the PJS?

For example, a reader of my blog recently sent me a copy of this letter (PDF format). It’s dated May 13, 2004, and is addressed to Dr. Sean C. Matheson. It’s signed by fourteen (14) District 150 administrators. It’s three pages long and expresses the administrators’ outrage over a litany of comments and actions by Matheson. “These comments and actions,” they conclude, “have been an attack on our professional judgment, integrity and reputations. They have created an uncomfortable and uncertain work environment that deters us from our mission.”

The person who forwarded this letter to me wrote, “This was passed to me a while back – it is my understanding that it was given to the PJS in 2004 and McDowell and Bailey suppressed [it] out of deference to their friendship with Matheson and Wieland.” Is this not the same kind of behavior we fear in a Ransburg? It would appear non-local corporate ownership is not the antidote to newsroom meddling.

I predict that, regardless of who buys the paper, there will be an adjustment period where we get to know the new owners’ biases, lambaste them, and then learn to compensate for them through other media, including TV, blogs, and alternative newspapers like the Peoria Times Observer.

Here are some interesting perspectives on local ownership of newspapers that I found on the web:

Open Thread on Park Board’s D150 denial

Well, I was off by one vote. I predicted that the Park Board would agree to pursue an intergovernmental agreement by a vote of 4-3.

Instead, the Park Board rejected the school’s plan to share park land on the corner of Glen Oak Park for a new East Bluff school building by a vote of 4-3.

I wasn’t able to attend the meeting, so I don’t have any details. If you know any details, please be sure to add them in the comments section below! I’ll add more as they become available.

UPDATE (10:09 p.m.): A friend of mine just wrote and shared these details:

The vote was 4 to 3 with Roger Allen, Tim Cassidy, Stan Budzinski and Jim Cummings voting “yes” to the motion which read” …reject the School Board’s proposal”. Board members Petty, Johnson and Ryan voted “no” So a yes was a no and a no was a yes- Typically confusing, but regardless this is a start in the right direction. […]

It was a packed meeting- standing room only- most of us had to stand in the hall. It was very respectful and orderly. […]

Cassidy was more general in his comments and while he complimented Ken Hinton for doing a wonderful job as Superintendent he said the Peoria Park Board’s responsibility is to protect park property and therefore he had to stick with his ultimate responsibility and vote to preserve the park.

Update (12/21): Here’s the story from a few news outlets:

  • WEEK-TV Channel 25 (best line: “District 1-50 will now have to meet to decide what is next. At this point, officials say they do not have a plan”)
  • WMBD-AM 1470
  • WMBD-TV Channel 31 (best line: “The majority of the trustees say they were elected to protect the park land, not give it away”)
  • Journal Star reporter Clare Jellick has her full story online now (most interesting quote: “District 150 Superintendent Ken Hinton said the vote means ‘another part of the community is going to get the school.’ He said Glen Oak Primary School will not close, and he isn’t interested in using the primary school site for a new school”)
  • WCBU-FM 89.9 reporter Tanya Koonce has her report online, too. (5 minute .mp3 file)

Also, WMBD-TV had this reaction from Superintendent Ken Hinton:

Newschannel 31 talked to District 150 Superintedent Ken Hinton Wednesday night who said he’s disappointed the park district didn’t allow the use of the land, but he’s not discouraged because he says the district has other option[s]. Hinton said he plans on talking to the school board Thursday.

I wonder (along with Billy Dennis, Bob Manning, and others), where is Mr. Hinton’s concern for the children now? It sounds like he’s saying, since he didn’t get his way, he’s going to recommend not building a new school in the East Bluff at all, but “another part of the community.” Is exacting your revenge against the East Bluff what’s best for the children, Mr. Hinton?

Open Thread on School Board Meeting tonight

  • UPDATE (12/20): I will not be able to make it to tonight’s Park Board meeting. It’s my understanding they will be voting on whether or not to pursue an intergovernmental agreement with the school district to allow park land to be shared with a new school for the East Bluff. Here you can check about some great leaders that school student should know about. I predict they’ll vote 4-3 in favor of it, although I hope they don’t. I hope the “vocal minority” shows up tonight to express their opposition.

You know you want to comment on it — here’s your forum.

Here is the complete school board deliberation (audio only), divided by speaker for ease of listening:

Mary Spangler (12:27)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/1-Spangler.mp3]

Debbie Wolfmeyer (4:46)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/2-Wolfmeyer.mp3]

Alicia Butler (4:45)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/3-Butler.mp3]

Sean Matheson (2:07)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/4-Matheson.mp3]

Jim Stowell (2:26)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/5-Stowell.mp3]

Vice President Martha Ross (3:44)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/6-Ross.mp3]

President David Gorenz (7:21)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/7-Gorenz.mp3]

Superintendent Ken Hinton (2:02)
[audio:http://www.peoriachronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/Audio/8-Hinton.mp3]

Park Board meeting review: Bee serious

See the beeLast night, I attended the Park Board meeting at Lincoln Middle School. The big topic of discussion, as you all know, was the school siting issue; i.e., should the Park Board enter into an intergovernmental agreement with District 150 to build a school on a corner of Glen Oak Park, sharing some park land in the process.

The most entertaining part of the evening (for me, anyway) was the presentation by District 150 consultant Judy Harris Helm. She was brought in to present the school district’s point of view on why a school sited in the park is superior to one at the current Glen Oak School location.

Appropriate for the grade school setting, Dr. Helm started her presentation with a little “show and tell.” She showed a picture of a bee rather crudely drawn by a young student, then showed a more recognizable picture of a bee she said was drawn by the same student only 45 minutes after the first one. The difference? The student only had book-learning before drawing the first picture, but had observed a real bee before drawing the second one. Conclusion: “When children only learn through books and secondary sources, they cannot practice the application of concepts. The experiences we provide shape the brain and intelligence.”

Now, if you’re like me, you’re thinking to yourself at this point, “Okay, that sounds great. What does this have to do with putting a school in a park?” Answer, according to Dr. Helm: “If that can happen with a bee, just imagine…if all this were part of a school.” She went on for at least half an hour pointing out the following:

Access to outdoors is associated with

  • Reduction of depression and aggression in children
  • Reduction of symptoms of attention deficit
  • Reduction of discipline problems
  • Environment-based education improves standarddized test scores and grade-point averages and develops skills in problem solving, critical thinking, and decision making.
  • Anecdotal evidence strongly suggests that childhood experiences in nature stimulate creativity.

What does the park site offer to children and teachers?

  • Botanical gardens
  • Zoo with new Africa Exhibit
  • Children’s museum with the river exhibit, science areas, history areas
  • Fitness areas
  • Frontier playground
  • Nature access: study of biology, botany, zoology
  • Lagoon: study of aquatic life

You get the idea. That part was actually not that entertaining. The entertaining part was the question and answer period. Immediately following her presentation, one member of the audience got up and, after pointing out to Dr. Helm that all the cited benefits were programming-related, not site-related, asked if the same outcomes — the same educational benefits — could be achieved just as effectively via a field trip to the park from the current site. Answer from Dr. Helm, and I quote: “Yes.”

A half-hour-plus argument extolling the virtues of siting the school in the park completely undermined by one simple question! It was a beautiful thing. But it got funnier — trying to save face, Helm went on to say that if the school wasn’t sited in the park, such field trips wouldn’t happen because — are you ready? — it would require planning and forethought on the part of teachers (teachers can’t/don’t plan?) and money for busing (clearly, $22 million for a new facility is far more cost effective than busing the kiddies six blocks or letting them walk). She eventually stopped talking (mercifully) and handed the mic to Hinton.

Later, during the public comment period, another member of the audience asked Superintendent Hinton what programs were in place currently at Lincoln Middle School and Woodruff High School to take advantage of Glen Oak Park which is right across the street from both schools. Mr. Hinton’s answer: “I don’t know.” If being adjacent to a park is the greatest thing since sliced bread, why isn’t the park being utilized right now by the schools that are right across the street? If it is being used, where’s the data showing the superior student performance at these schools?

It’s worth mentioning that everyone who spoke to the board during the public comment period — everyone, to a person — spoke against the park siting for the school. Included among the commenters were representatives from the Glen Oak Park Neighborhood Association, the Serenity Neighborhood Association, and the East Bluff United Neighborhood Association.

Now that we have Dr. Helm on record as saying that the same educational objectives the school district wants at the park site can be achieved at the current site at Frye and Wisconsin, I think that should be final nail in the coffin for this plan. I’m not saying it will be, because the odds are pretty good that the school board will go through with it anyway unless the park board votes it down. But it should be.

Park Board meeting tonight at 6:00

Park District LogoFor those of you interested in the “Community School Project” (i.e., the plan to put a replacement school for the Woodruff attendance area on a corner of Glen Oak Park), tonight’s the night to express your opinion to the Peoria Park Board. They will be meeting at Lincoln Middle School, 700 Mary St. (next to Woodruff), at 6:00 p.m.

One question that I hope comes up is, “How does this partnership help fulfill the Park District’s mission statement?” That mission statement is, “To enrich life in our community through stewardship of the environment and through provision of quality recreation and leisure opportunities.” So, how exactly does putting a school on a corner of the park constitute “stewardship of the environment”? What “quality recreation” is being provided by the school? What “leisure opportunities”?

Spin City: Journal Star editorial on school/park agreement

The Journal Star didn’t publish its pro-intergovernmental-agreement editorial online today, so I can’t link to it. But I’m still going to comment on it. I think everyone is aware that District 150 and the Peoria Park District on March 29, 2006, signed a Letter of Intent to enter into an intergovernmental agreement that would allow the school district to build a new school at the corner of Frye and Prospect using a combination of acquired parcels and shared Glen Oak Park land. The Journal Star thinks the park board should stick by that agreement, despite public outcry against it.

The Journal Star editors’ thesis is summed up in the first sentence:

If the Peoria Park Board were to pull the rug out now from beneath its partnership with District 150 regarding the construction of a new school in upper Glen Oak Park, just eight months after effectively greenlighting the project, it would represent an act of bad faith not only against District 150, but against its own taxpayers.

That sentence is the epitome of spin. First of all, what represents “an act of bad faith…against its own taxpayers” is the park district violating the Open Meetings Act to hammer out an agreement with the school board in secret (there’s a lawsuit still pending on that matter), and the school board subsequently acting on a letter of intent as if it were legally binding.

Secondly, the taxpayers don’t want the school in the park! The Journal Star Editorial Board (JSEB) can’t seem to get that through their heads. If the park district were to cancel their participation in this project, it would show — contrary to the JSEB’s assertions — that they were acting in good faith, listening to the taxpayers, and making amends for their earlier errors.

The JSEB then writes this whopper:

[A]ny misgivings Park Board member Roger Allen and perhaps others had about this project should have been voiced publicly before March 29, when the two boards agreed to go forward, and before District 150 spent $877,500 purchasing eight private properties next to the park. Even if it was premature of District 150 to begin buying homes before it had the park district’s rock-solid OK, there was time for the park board to say “whoa” before it got this far.

No kidding. Apparently the park board didn’t realize this would be so unpopular with the public, otherwise they wouldn’t have signed the letter of intent in the first place. Which is why it might have been a good idea to not have secret meetings in violation of the Open Meetings Act in the first place. Those laws are there for a reason — and one of them is to protect the park board from foolish mistakes like this one.

If a majority of the park board follows Allen’s lead [i.e., changing their minds] …they’ll have some real explaining to do to [the] taxpayers.

Au contraire; if a majority of the park board continues to ignore the public and act on secret deals, then they’ll have some explaining to do to taxpayers.

Despite feigned concern for taxpayers, the JSEB in the very next paragraph implies that those same taxpayers are either malicious (spreading misinformation; suing the park board), or stupid (believing misinformation), or simply ungrateful (for not embracing a new East Bluff school at any cost).

There’s more, which you can read below (just click the “show more” link to read the whole editorial), but those are the main points. |inline

Note to Tim Cassidy: School Board has already acted

Today’s Journal Star quotes Peoria Park District Board President Tim Cassidy saying this about the upcoming park board meeting where they will be discussing District 150’s plans to build a new school building on a corner of Glen Oak Park:

“I don’t see how we could (vote). The school district hasn’t acted on anything yet. I don’t think they’ve made a final decision. I don’t think we should be preempting the decision for them,” Park Board President Tim Cassidy said last week.

Let’s see, the school board has spent $877,500 to acquire property on the proposed site, signed a letter of intent to enter into an intergovernmental agreement with the park board, hired architects and planners to work on design and programming for the new building, and spurned all attempts from the public and the City of Peoria to build on the current Glen Oak School site… am I leaving anything out? If Mr. Cassidy believes that constitutes no action on the part of the school board, then he has a most bizarre definition of inaction.

Since he doesn’t want to “preempt” the school board’s decision, the park board will not vote on the matter at Wednesday’s meeting; they’ll just hear testimony from the school board, the Heart of Peoria Commission, and the public at large.

If you’d like to attend and let the park board know how you feel about the whole thing, you can! The meeting is open to the public, and will take place 6 p.m. Wednesday (Dec. 13) at Lincoln Middle School, 700 Mary St.