Click image to view

Tuesday November 22, 2011 at 12:00 pm

rnrnHouse and Senate members ask Governor Corbett to schedule an emergency meeting on Tuesday January 17th to discuss the possible shutdown of the Chester-Upland School District. Letter from Dominic Pileggi and other senate and house members: rn___________________________________________________January 13, 2012rn?rnrnThe Honorable Thomas W. CorbettrnGovernor of Pennsylvania rnGovernor's Office?
225 Main Capitol Building?
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17120rn?rnRe: Fiscal Crisis at Chester-Upland School Districtrn?rn?Dear Governor Corbett:rn?rnWe the undersigned are the legislators whose districts, in whole or in part, include Delaware County. We are Republicans and Democrats who are united in asking for your administration's assistance in addressing the crisis in the Chester-Upland School District.rnrnAs you know, the situation at Chester-Upland is rapidly becoming unsustainable. The district, one of the poorest in the state, is responsible for educating more than 3,600 students (excluding children in charter schools). Currently, it faces a debt of approximately $21 million. As of today, its bank account contains about $300,000. There are?about $230,000 in outstanding checks which have been sent but not yet cashed. This would leave approximately $70,000 cash?in the hands of the?District. Further, the District is holding up $432,000 in checks to venders which are due, but which the District does not have the money to cover.?This financial situation, as dire as it is, will only worsen in the short term as money due and owing continues to exceed incoming revenues.rnrnPut bluntly, Chester-Upland School District is unable to pay its bills. Among the current obligations the District is unable to meet are teacher's salaries and payments to venders, including fuel to drive the school buses, maintenance for those buses, electricity, school lunches, medical insurance?etc. The teachers and administrators?of the District have selflessly agreed to work without pay for a short period of time as we attempt to resolve this issue. But this is obviously not a situation that is sustainable for any length of time.rnrnThis is not the time to assign blame, either to the state boards of control which ran the district from 1994 to 2010, or the current elected school board which has been responsible for the past 18 months. Our focus should be on the children of the district.rnrnWe agree that the Commonwealth cannot continue to direct additional taxpayer dollars to a broken system. However, without short-term financial help, Chester-Upland faces the strong, imminent likelihood that it will have to close its doors and stop educating children. It is important?to recognize what that means specifically. There is no other school district, collection of school districts, or charter school?nearby that could come remotely close to accommodating 3,600 students.?Thus, if Chester-Upland closes its doors, there will be thousands of Pennsylvania children who literally have nowhere to go?to school.rnrnWe are aware that PDE has taken the position that Chester-Upland is not a distressed school district under 24 PS section 6-691. However, we do not agree with that conclusion and believe that the Secretary should declare the district to be distressed. It is through this mechanism that the Secretary and a Board of Control can fashion intermediate and long-term financial plans for the district.rnrnObviously this is a humanitarian and public perception problem that will quickly gain national attention. We have literally never faced such a situation before. While there may be some room to debate how we arrived at this moment, it seems to us that there can be no debate regarding the need to address this situation immediately and decisively. We, the Delaware County?legislative delegation, are therefore asking for an emergency meeting on Tuesday, January 17th with you, Secretary of Education Tomalis, and Budget Secretary Zogby, as well as any other person you believe could be helpful. We will make ourselves available at any time which is convenient to you. We look forward to hearing from you and working with your administration to solve this pressing problem.rn?rnrnVery Truly Yours, rn?rn?rnSenator Dominic PileggirnSenator Daylin LeachrnSenator Ted Erickson rnRepresentative Stephen BarrarrnRepresentative Joseph HackettrnRepresentative Maria DonatuccirnRepresentative Thomas KillionrnRepresentative Greg VitalirnRepresentative William Adolph, Jr. rnrncc: Secretary of Education Ron Tomalis rn Chester-Upland School District________________________________ rnrnrnrnrnrnrnrnArchive Video: We asked Rep. Ron Buxton if the $250 million plus debt of the Harrisburg School District should be addressed in the receivers plan along with the $318 million of debt against the RRF. Assured Guaranty has not only insured the majority of the RRF debt if covered at least $183 million of the school district debt. Tags: Harrisburg School District Assured Guaranty Receiver SB 1151 Ron Buxton Chapter 9

Tags:
Sign Up or Log In to comment.