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View Full Version : Detroit to send layoff notices to all its public teachers



Teh One Who Knocks
04-15-2011, 12:11 PM
Reporting by James B. Kelleher; Editing by Jerry Norton


CHICAGO (Reuters) – The emergency manager appointed to put Detroit's troubled public school system on a firmer financial footing said on Thursday he was sending layoff notices to all of the district's 5,466 unionized employees.

In a statement posted on the website of Detroit Public Schools, Robert Bobb, the district's temporary head, said notices were being sent to every member of the Detroit Federation of Teachers "in anticipation of a workforce reduction to match the district's declining student enrollment."

Bobb said nearly 250 administrators were receiving the notices, too.

The district is unlikely to eliminate all the teachers. Last year, it sent out 2,000 notices and only a fraction of employees were actually laid off. But the notices are required by the union's current contract with the district. Any layoffs under this latest action won't take effect until late July.

In the meantime, Bobb said that he planned to exercise his power as emergency manager to unilaterally modify the district's collective bargaining agreement with the Federation of Teachers starting May 17, 2011.

Under a law known as Public Act 4, passed by the Michigan legislature and signed by the state's new Republican governor in March, emergency managers like Bobb have sweeping powers. They can tear up existing union contracts, and even fire some elected officials, if they believe it will help solve a financial emergency.

"I fully intend to use the authority that was granted under Public Act 4," Bobb said in the statement.

He was appointed emergency financial manager for Detroit's schools two years ago by then-Governor Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat, to close chronic budget deficits brought on by declining enrollment in the city. Over just the past year, Detroit's population has dropped 25 percent, according to census data.

Bobb has closed schools, laid off workers and taken other steps to cut spending but the district still faces a $327 million budget deficit.

Deepsepia
04-15-2011, 12:30 PM
Reporting by James B. Kelleher; Editing by Jerry Norton

Over just the past year, Detroit's population has dropped 25 percent, according to census data.


um mm James Kelleher and Jerry Norton need reminding that a census is every ten years. Losing %25 of the population over a decade is astonishing, other than bubonic plague, it couldn't happen in a year.

But back to the point of the story "right sizing" services in a declining city is a super tough job, and there are some interesting ideas. The worst situation is where you have huge neighborhoods with only a handful of homes occupied. If you can you want to close down whole neighborhoods with their services, and keeps others . . . easier said than done, but I think its Flint that's basically bulldozing neighborhoods

Joebob034
04-15-2011, 03:21 PM
and it just gets uglier

Muddy
04-15-2011, 04:11 PM
Robert Bobb used to run Richmond.. (where im from)

Joebob034
04-15-2011, 04:16 PM
I've actually agreed with most of Bob Bob's decisions, but he met resistance every step of the way. Every head of the DPS before him has been involved in scandals and abuses of power that I think people in the city got used to it. Then when they get someone who actually knows what he is doing they hate him. Same with Bing, they don't like his ideas because they had Kwame for so long and Coleman years before that who were giant crooks and frauds.

Muddy
04-15-2011, 04:19 PM
I dont think Bobs a crook.. The guy has a ton of experience for sure..