Jefferson Cluster school reps, NECN to address school boundary changes

Two meetings this week will delve into the long-term changes planned for the schools in North and Northeast Portland that lie within Portland Public Schools’ Jefferson Middle College dual-enrollment zones. Although Jefferson was converted from a neighborhood comprehensive to a middle college focus program in the high school redesign, PPS administers this area separately from the neighborhood high school areas.

At issue is the wide variance in enrollment between various K-5 and K-8 schools in this area. PPS has already closed Humboldt School and Tubman Young Women’s Learning Academy this spring. PPS seeks to resolve the issue of persistent low enrollment at King School and Ockley Green schools while possibly changing some school configurations from K-8 to K-5 and/or creating a new middle school. King’s enrollment of 285 is far short of the district’s goal of 500. PPS also does not project any growth in the PPS student population in King.

On Wednesday July 25th, from 6-8 pm at the King Neighborhood Facility will be thhe enrollment balancing planning meeting. Director of Enrollment and Transfer at PPS, Judy Brennan, will meet with school community members to discuss the public outreach process and identify stakeholder groups in the reconfiguration process. Light dinner and child care will be provided.

The purpose of the meeting is for District staff to share information about enrollment challenges and opportunities at schools in the Jefferson Cluster, and to receive advice from community members on conducting a respectful and productive community process around these issues/opportunities this fall. The overall goal is to have recommendations for School Board action by winter that will be implemented in September 2013.

More than 20 parents and community members representing numerous schools, partner agencies, and neighborhood representatives have been invited to participate.

On Thursday, July 26th, from 6:30-8pm, the Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods’ Schools Committee will meet at the King Facility as well. This meeting will follow up on the discussion of the previous night. Special guests will include Rep. Lew Frederick and his staffer and former school board member, Sue Hagmeier, for a discussion about how to support inner North and Northeast Portland’s neighborhood schools.

KNA June Meeting Tonight, May Minutes Online

The June meeting of the King Neighborhood Association will take place 6:30 tonight at the King Neighborhood Facility, 4815 NE 7th Avenue. Access is via the door facing 7th. The draft minutes from the May meeting are online here.

Tonight’s Agenda:

6:30     Welcome & introductions, agenda, announcements, meeting minutes.

6:40     Update from the Portland Police Bureau.

6:45     Update from the Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods (NECN).

6:50     KNA tasks & projects:

  • 7-11; communications funds
  • Portland Playhouse & parking;
  • Soil to Soul’s Backpack campaign;
  • Movie in the Park;
  • Summer potluck picnic;

KNA needs a secretary to keep minutes & records.

7:30     KNA by-laws; Neighborhood Association structure.

At last month’s meeting:

  • KNA supported Portland Flea, a resale market proposed for the King Facility lot. The market has since been denied use of the space due to zoning regulations.
  • KNA residents on Sumner Street continue to oppose the proposed 7-Eleven on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. and are trying to find a way to mitigate traffic impacts.
  • Woody Broadnax received KNA support for an event at the vacant lot at MLK and Alberta on July 21-22nd.  It will be a voter registration drive with food, music, and speakers.
  • Dr. Maila Davenport introduced a year-long World Tree Project-six sites that would have a world tree and community art element.  A letter from KNA is required for Maila’s grant application to Regional Arts and Culture Council. KNA will discuss the idea via email.
  • KNA is partnering with NECN on a fund raising drive for the Backpack Lunch Program. KNA and the King School PTA would jointly aim to have enough food and enough money to do a big packing day in November.
  • KNA voted to form the Soil to Soul food security committee, which would address King Neighborhood food-related topics as they arose (i.e.,7-Eleven actions, the Sprite Spark Parks Project at King School).
  • KNA’s Movie in the Park will be ET: The Extraterrestrial, screened on Saturday June 30.  Several people are working on selling advertisements, finding volunteers, and asking for raffle donations.

King, Other N/NE School Boundaries to Change

How can the parents and public be involved?

Robb Cowie, Executive Director, Community Involvement and Public Affairs at PPS will meet with the King School community on Tuesday, June 5th starting at 5:30 in the King School Library. Come to hear about the district’s plans for public engagement in developing the plan to change King School boundaries to raise enrollment and make King sustainable.

As part of the plan to reconfigure the former Jefferson cluster, schools may be closed, change from K-8 to K-5, or change programming. Since the cluster lacks a middle school, a stand-alone middle school may be created. The decision is expected to be finalized by October 2012.

 Enrollment Balancing Public Process Meeting
 Tuesday, June 5th 5:30pm
 King School Library, 4906 NE 6th

King to Humboldt Families: “You have a choice”

The following letter was distributed by King PTA members to Humboldt parents this morning at Humboldt School.  The proposed closure of Humboldt is being executed prior to the decision being voted on.  PPS has given Humboldt families until today to transfer to another school rather than be merged with Boise-Eliot. This option to transfer is not being openly offered to Humboldt parents however.

“Together It Takes a Village”

April 15, 2012

Dear Humboldt School Parents, Guardians and Community Members:

On behalf of the King School community of parents and community members, we would like to reach out and extend our support to all of you at this very frustrating and unsettling time. Portland Public Schools’ recommendation to close your school and consolidate your student body with Boise-Eliot appears to be more of an already made decision rather than a mere recommendation.

Since King School is in close proximity and is a neighboring school to Humboldt, this pending recommendation heightens the awareness and reinforces the concerns our school community has had with Portland Public Schools. These concerns and accountability of how neighborhood boundary decisions are made by PPS has been an issue that we have tried to be proactive about in regards to obtaining answers from PPS.

The recommendation to consolidate your students with Boise-Eliot doesn’t make sense when your school is closer to King School which has more capacity and larger facilities. In an on-line April 5, 2012 PPS website article, Judy Brennan, who oversees PPS enrollment and transfers, said: “the district uses a variety of factors, including transportation and facility size, when deciding how to shift students. For example, King PK-8 School is close to Humboldt but across from Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, a major road, making Boise-Eliot a better choice.” Also, in the April 2, 2012 PPS Budget Message, Superintendent, Carole Smith, stated to the PPS Board of Education that “Staff will be talking to students and their families from both Humboldt and the Young Women’s Leadership Academy about choices for next year. We will work to provide ways for students to have an option to stay together with their current classmates, as well as the possibility of attending their neighborhood school.”
As such, did you all, as parents, have any input on what neighborhood school would be best for your student? Many of you expressed during the Thursday, April 12th public comment meeting that the majority of you take pleasure and appreciation in being able to walk your student(s) to school. Sending them, now, to Boise-Eliot would remove that as an option for many, as well as destroy the sense of community that you all have worked hard in building for yourselves and for your children. In addition to that, many of you also expressed confusion and uncertainty of what options and deadlines you have in regards to what school may be best for your child, should you not agree with sending them to Boise-Eliot.

With that said, the King School community shares in your idea of creating a strong community, as well as being invested and committed to the excellence of your child’s academic achievement. Over the past three years, we have labored to create a strong foundation at King School that supports, not only academic achievement amongst our students but also, a well-rounded educational and learning experience for our students. We are achieving this through solid leadership, direction and advocacy from our Principal, Kim Patterson, becoming an International Baccalaureate school (which supports a holistic way of teaching and learning), establishing community partnerships that support our programming and student enrichment (SEI, Ethos Music Center, Wordstock, Playworks, SUN and Literary Arts), having strong parent involvement and leadership, as well as being fortunate to have resources through a three year, 5.5 million dollar School Improvement Grant.

We are seeing the fruits of our labor and would welcome your students and families to join our school and parent community with open arms. So please know that King School is an option for you and there’s plenty of room. Having your community energy, passion, commitment and dedication to your neighborhood school would be a cherished asset to what we have established. Not only would it, together, create a larger student body but, it would also reinforce a stronger core program and community. We realize and understand that as Humboldt and Young Women’s Leadership Academy are being considered for closure, PPS’s actions show a lack of regard for north and northeast Schools, specifically as it relates to high minority populated and lower-income schools. Therefore, none of us are exempt from experiencing these hasty decisions made by Portland Public Schools.

If you are interested in remaining in your neighborhood school zone and would like to consider King School as an option/choice, receive more information or tour/visit our school community, please contact us at 503.916.6456 or email info@kingpta.org. Also, note that you may have been told that you have a deadline to make a transfer choice by Friday, April 13th or by Monday, April 16th. If that is the case, and you are interested in transferring to King School, you can contact Judy Brennan, Director of Enrollment and Transfer, at 503.916.3205 or jbrennan@pps.net and she will see that you get into King School. Again, we are ready and prepared to receive you so there should be no problems with getting in!!

Let’s use this opportunity to take a stance together against our bully of a system. Our motto at King School is “Together It Takes a Village”. At this time, this statement is true more than ever so let’s join hands and efforts in reflecting that.

Sincerely,
King School PTA

Meeting on 7-Eleven April 18th

Do you want a 7-Eleven in your neighborhood?

What do you want neighborhood revitalization to look like?

The King Neighborhood Association
Invites you to a meeting with representatives from 7-Eleven to discuss their proposal to build a store
at Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd & Sumner.

Residents near the location have adamantly opposed construction of a 7-Eleven.

Our meeting will feature community speakers addressing issues of store-related crime, effects on local minority-owned businesses, an increase in traffic on a neighborhood residential street, what it means to have a chain store sited in an area zoned for the creation and promotion of locally-owned business, and the fact that 7-11 profits from addictive and poisonous products, at the expense of community and individual health & wellness.

Join us as neighbors working with neighbors for a healthy community.
Let 7-Eleven know what you think!

Wednesday, April 18th
6:30 – 8 pm
King Elementary School library
4906 NE 6th Avenue