Mayor Not Interested in MPS Takeover
Johnson says no to city takeover, adds that all Milwaukee schools should be focused on better outcomes.
Despite turmoil in the district and calls from the community for action, Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson said Tuesday he is not interested in a city takeover of Milwaukee Public Schools.
Instead, Johnson said he is hoping there will be a renewed focus on improving education at all schools — including Milwaukee Public Schools and the charter and private schools across the city.
Johnson spoke to the media hours after MPS Superintendent Keith Posley resigned. That resignation was accepted by the district’s board at about 2 a.m. Tuesday following a fiery public hearing Monday evening attended by hundreds of community members, most calling for Posley to be fired.
The public anger at district administration was ignited by news that the district is in jeopardy of losing millions of dollars in state funding after failing to submit financial reports for months to the Department of Public Instruction.
Millions of dollars in federal funding is also being withheld from the district’s Head Start program after officials discovered abuse and lack of supervision in MPS programs.
But parents and community members who spoke at the meeting spoke repeatedly of larger issues within the district and called for systematic change.
Posley’s resignation is effective June 30.
According to a statement issued by the board early Tuesday, MPS Regional Superintendent for the Southwest Region Eduardo Galvan will “support and facilitate day-to-day operations” of the district while the school board seeks an interim replacement.
He said Tuesday anywhere people move, they consider the school district. That is why it is important for him to be involved.
MPS is the largest school district in the state, with roughly 68,000 students.
But Johnson didn’t let the other schools in the city off the hook. The district is losing students to private and charter schools in the city that have nearly as many students. Johnson said many of those schools are successful, but some are equally as challenged as MPS.
As far as Posley’s legacy, Johnson said he has worked closely with the soon-to-be superintendent and they have had success.
Johnson touted programs that have shown students they can directly enter the workforce after high school and can prosper.
“In Wisconsin’s system of local control, elected school boards make decisions about district superintendent staffing,” Underly said in a statement. “ No matter how the board chooses to move forward, under my leadership, the DPI will continue working with the MPS team to resolve the current challenge. As we go forward, our primary focus is on improving outcomes for all of Milwaukee’s children.”
Milwaukee Mayor not interested in MPS takeover was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
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- Gov. Evers Announces MGT Consulting of America Selected to Conduct Independent Audit of MPS Operations - Gov. Tony Evers - Jul 29th, 2024
- MTEA Files Ethics Complaint Against Secretive “Recall Collaborative” After Recall Organizers Admit to “Anonymous Donors” - Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association - Jul 26th, 2024
- Milwaukee Board of School Directors Statement Regarding an Interim Superintendent of Schools - Milwaukee Public Schools - Jul 25th, 2024
- MPS Recall Organizers Say They’ve Collected 37,000 Signatures, More Needed - Evan Casey - Jul 25th, 2024
- School Board “Recall Collaborative” Shrouded in Secrecy, Ethical Questions - Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association - Jul 24th, 2024
- K-12 Education: The School Finance Fixer Comes to MPS - Terry Falk - Jul 23rd, 2024
Read more about MPS Financial Crisis here
Terribly disappointing. Here is the MPS formula for career electeds: 1. find the scapegoat, fire them. 2. wait until public uproar dies down. 3 proceed as normal. You cannot improve educational outcomes with the status quo.
Problems with MPS have existed for decades. I became award of the problems in the 1970s as I was looking for my first teaching job out of college. Until we address the root cause of MPS’ disfunction, there can be no effective solution. The critical question is what has existed throughout the last 50+ years of MPS dysfunction? It’s not the teachers’ union, though many including the former governor would blame them. No, the root cause lies at a much deeper level and impacts things like the school to prison pipeline, and the inequitable distribution of resources.
mkwagner, what is the root of MPS’s problems?