Desks for Classrooms Can Wait—Get Some Custom-Made Furniture In This Suite, Stat!
Supporters of the Baltimore city school system "have rallied from City Hall to the State House for basic necessities like working water fountains, desks, and windows for natural light," reports Erica Green of The Baltimore Sun. Perhaps they should hold their next rally at the superintendent's office. Green writes:
New furniture, a flat-screen television, decorative light fixtures, interactive white boards -- these are among amenities the city school system bought during $500,000 in renovations to the central office, even as administrators decried the state of crumbling school buildings and sought funding to fix them.
The biggest project was a $250,000 face lift of an executive suite for the district's chief of information technology, who said the remodeling work was done in part to impress job candidates and repair unsafe conditions….
Other big-ticket projects include $94,000 spent on relocating employees and furnishing offices during [Superintendent Andrés] Alonso's 2011 reorganization of the central office. Upgrades like fresh coats of paint on office walls, carpeting, new furniture and cubicles were provided to relocated employees.
About $76,000 was spent to renovate the school system's board room, where the school board and other public meetings are held.
Chief of Information Technology Jerome Oberlton tells the Sun he needed to upgrade the suite because the conditions there were driving away potential employees: "I saw good people walk out the door and not come to city schools." Perhaps the classrooms would be in better shape if students, and their money, could leave as easily.
Meanwhile, score one for the press:
Some changes were made after The Sun inquired about the renovations. Roughly $41,000 in custom-made furniture was ordered for the new suite, but city school officials canceled the order. Instead, furniture was brought in from the district's warehouse, resulting in a $37,000 savings.
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"Wherever you go, there you are."
"Until you go somewhere else."
About $76,000 was spent to renovate the school system's board room, where the school board and other public meetings are held.
Totally unnecessary. They have access to plenty of space in other buildings under their control. Let 'em have board meetings in school gyms, libraries, whatever.
[T]he conditions there were driving away potential employees...
Nice try, but no cigar. If the delicate little snowflakes can't hack a butt-ugly GI conference room for a one hour job interview, then they're not going to make it in the real world conditions. Weeds out the ones who will quit during the first year. Feature, not bug.
[T]he conditions there were driving away potential employees...
that was my favorite quote, too. Talk about a nuclear lack of self-awareness. Aren't educrats usually leading the chant about how folks get into the business for altruistic reasons? If the answer to that was "yes", worthwhile potential employees would sign on because they would see a system committing resources to actual education rather than to administration comfort.
See, because they go into the business for altruistic reasons, they deserve to work in golden palaces and be paid like kings! It's all very meta.
I saw it as more dishonest than clueless.
There's really no reason it can't be both.
Why did it cost $4000 to bring furniture from the warehouse?
The 4k kickback still had to be paid.
*You* try getting union guys to move furniture cheaply, tulip.
Besides the moving costs, probably some of it was broken. Repairing table legs, re-keying locks, etc.
My grandpa used to do that sort of thing for our county.
I bet if they abolished the Central Administration and fired all its employees that the students in Baltimore schools would not even notice.
Sure they would. They'd notice their school improve.
Anyone who's been to Baltimore knows that "The Wire" was softpedaling the reality of the place. The only surprise about this corruption story is that it's not bigger.
^THIS^
Local news and talk radio also discovered that Dr. Alonso's driver made, including overtime, $77,000.
One of his public excuses was that his driver also served as security and was necessary because he sometimes had to go into "bad neighborhoods" in the course of his job visiting Balto City Schools.
You know - the ones where the STUDENTS are...
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