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FEATURES: Hope after Katrina
By Kathryn G. Newmark and Veronique De Rugy
Will New Orleans become the new city of choice?
A student starting public school in New Orleans in the fall of
2005 had little reason to be hopeful about her education. Of her 65,000
schoolmates in the New Orleans Public Schools (NOPS), over half of
those taking the state’s high-stakes tests (4th, 8th, 10th, and
11th graders) did not have “basic” competence in math and
English; 68 of the 108 NOPS schools receiving performance labels had
been rated “academically unacceptable” by the Louisiana
Department of Education, 13 more than just the year before (see Figure
1). Many of the city’s high schools had double-digit dropout
rates, and a state auditor, calling the district’s finances a
“train wreck,” estimated that NOPS was running double-digit
(in millions of dollars) deficits.

A student starting school in New Orleans in
the fall of 2006, on the other hand, has some reason for
optimism. There are now only an estimated 22,000 students and 57
schools in the district. Very few of them are being run by the New
Orleans Public Schools; more than half the schools are charters and
anxious to please, offering new curricula, longer school days, even
special summer sessions.
What happened? The short answer is Katrina,
the category 3 hurricane that pounded southeast Louisiana the
morning of August 29, 2005, and devastated New Orleans, including
its schools. The longer answer is that the destruction, terrible as
it was, may prove to be the salvation of a school district that had
been drowning for years. Politicians, educators, and parents, long
frustrated with the state of public education in New Orleans,
suddenly had the opportunity, as the waters receded, to build,
almost from scratch, a new school system.
It will be years before we know the outcome of
this major renewal effort. But already we can see outlines of the
future. Before Katrina, the Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB),
which had run public schools in New Orleans, operated 123 schools;
in the spring following the storm, it was running just 4. Before
the storm there were 5 charter schools in a district of 65,000
students; by May of 2006, ten months after the hurricane, there
were 18 charters in a New Orleans Public School district educating
just 12,000 students (see Figure 2). It was, almost literally, a
sea change in the organizational structure of the city’s
school system. Overnight, New Orleans, with nearly 70 percent of
public school students in schools of choice, had become one of the
most chartered cities in America. (In Washington, D.C., and Dayton,
Ohio, two of the most charter-concentrated cities up to now, only
about a quarter of public school students attend charter schools.)
No doubt, the hurricane was destructive. Some 85, or nearly
two-thirds, of the city’s school buildings had been wiped out
or damaged by the floodwaters, at an estimated
loss of $800 million. And tens of thousands of New Orleans
residents, their homes and livelihoods destroyed, fled the city;
Houston public schools alone absorbed more than 5,000 of the
refugee students. It seemed that Katrina accomplished in a
day—dismantling a derelict school district—what
Louisiana school reformers couldn’t do after years of trying.
A Slow Road to Ruin
To many observers, it seemed quite plausible
that if a hurricane hadn’t closed them, New Orleans public
schools would have tumbled on their own. The city had 55 of the
state’s 78 worst schools in 2003–04, and between 1998
and 2004 school enrollment had dropped by 26 percent, from 82,000
to 65,000 students. (The Orleans Parish population itself decreased
by less than 1 percent, from 466,000 to 462,000, during this time.)
Mismanagement and corruption were rampant.
“In the dismal gallery of failing urban
school systems,” wrote Associated Press reporter Adam
Nossiter in April of 2005, several months before Katrina,
“New Orleans may be the biggest horror of them all.”
Exasperation with the district’s poor
management and record of even poorer performance had already
motivated many efforts to fix things. But almost as persistent as
the district’s low test scores and high dropout rates were
the number of school superintendents—eight in seven
years—who promised change and failed to deliver, swallowed up
by petty politics and power struggles. One early effort at reform
was a proposal from the University of New Orleans (UNO) in the
summer of 2001 to create and oversee a new charter school district,
converting 10 existing public schools to charters. But the school
board and teachers union objected and UNO scaled the proposal down
to managing just 1 charter school. Later, even that agreement fell
apart over teacher contract issues.
In October 2003, over opposition from the
Orleans Parish School Board, voters in the state approved a
constitutional amendment, by a 60 to 40 percent margin, allowing
the state to assume control of public schools that received an
“academically unacceptable” rating four years in a row,
applied retroactively so that failing New Orleans schools could be
taken over sooner. And, in fact, of the 16 schools statewide
eligible for takeover for the 2004–05 school year, 15 were in
Orleans Parish. Those schools were made part of a “Recovery
School District,” run by the state but eligible to become
charters if they wished.
The first takeover occurred in the summer of
2004 when the state handed control of P.A. Capdau Middle School to
the University of New Orleans. Signaling the pent-up demand for
change in New Orleans, more than 500 students applied for 264 spots
at the revamped school, and more than 60 teachers applied for the
16 available positions. Pleased by this progress, the school board
reversed its earlier opposition to UNO-run schools and proposed
that the university operate more of them.
In the middle of this small burst of reform
came Anthony Amato, a hard-charging administrator from Hartford
with ambitious goals and a track record of succeeding in urban
schools. Taking up the superintendent’s reins in
February of 2003, Amato promised to increase test scores and root
out corruption. He demoted 20 principals, standardized literacy
programs, and reduced student absenteeism by nearly 30 percent in
his first year on the job. Typically, in doing the hard things, he
rubbed many New Orleans school-establishment people the wrong way
and by the middle of 2004, there was a movement afoot to fire him.
“In 18 months,” ran a headline in the July 2004
issue of District Administration
Magazine, a national journal for
K–12 administrators, “New Orleans Superintendent
Anthony Amato has rid his district of ghost teachers and focused
haphazard curricula. So why is he involved in a nasty fight to
retain his job?” And though he had many supporters, including
powerful state legislators who pushed through a special bill that
transferred powers from the school board to the superintendent,
Amato could not survive the disastrous financial reports, audits,
and indictments that began flowing through his office in 2005,
almost as a prelude to Katrina’s tidal surge.
First, it was the state auditor calling the
district a “train wreck” (this in early 2005) and
detailing a list of abuses that included promotion policies that
put people in jobs they were not qualified for and a district
accounting office that employed “not one accountant.”
The auditor estimated that the system was running a $25 to $30
million deficit, but couldn’t be certain because of the
shoddy quality of the financial records. Then the U.S. Department
of Education found nearly $70 million in federal money for
low-income students either improperly accounted for or misspent.
Finally, federal and state investigators, who had been looking at
New Orleans since 2004, opened an office inside the school
administration building itself. Their investigation resulted in two
dozen indictments for theft, fraud, and kickbacks. (By early summer
of 2006 there were 20 guilty pleas.)
Finally, at an April 2005 school board meeting
that was “crackling with racial hostility,” according
to the Associated Press, Amato tendered his resignation. In late
May the board finally gave in to the stark reality and hired the financial turnaround firm of Alvarez & Marsal
(A&M), which was headquartered in New York City and had offices
throughout the world (though not in New Orleans), to take control
of hiring, firing, and contracting in the central office. Though
the Orleans Parish School Board would still maintain control over
the budget and the hiring and firing of teachers, A&M would
report directly to the state superintendent and have the authority
to appoint the district’s top financial officers.
In a July status report, barely six weeks
before Katrina, Alvarez & Marsal summarized the grim situation:
“The conditions we have found are as bad as any we have ever
encountered. The financial data that exists is (sic) unreliable,
there has not been a clean audit since FY 2001-2002, there is no
inventory of assets, the payroll system is in shambles, school
buildings are in deplorable condition and, up to now, there has
been little accountability.” A&M, projecting that the
district would “run out of cash by September,” began to
cut the budget by some 10 percent, and announced what it said was
the first in a series of layoffs.
By the time Katrina struck and the levees
broke that August morning, New Orleans schools were already listing
badly.
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Even after the shock wore off and city, state, and federal officials began talking about rebuilding, New Orleans school leaders were predicting that most schools wouldn't reopen for at least a year.
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A Difficult Restart
At first it looked as if Katrina would spell
the end of all of New Orleans, including its schools. The
city’s students and teachers were quickly scattered around
the country, and many had no plans to return. Students enrolled in
new schools, including the thousands who entered the Houston public
schools (altogether an estimated 250,000 evacuees went to Houston),
and teachers found new jobs.
There wouldn’t have been much to come
home to: Alvarez & Marsal officials reported that 47 of the 128
New Orleans public schools were severely damaged and 38 more had
moderate damage.
Even after the shock wore off and city, state,
and federal officials began talking about rebuilding, New Orleans
school leaders were predicting that most schools wouldn’t
reopen for at least a year. The undamaged buildings on the West
Bank, they said, wouldn’t be ready for students until January
2006, and no East Bank schools would educate students in the
2005–06 school year. Even when school officials reassessed
the situation and determined that they could reopen schools sooner
than first thought, the district was immediately beset by the same
old internal board conflicts, the same fights between the Orleans
Parish School Board and state officials. At the September 15 board
meeting, barely two weeks after the city had been brought to its
knees, tensions boiled over in a racially charged session where,
according to the New Orleans Times-Picayune, “the battle lines were drawn.” Board
member Phyllis Landrieu, who is white (and the aunt of U.S. senator
Mary Landrieu and Louisiana lieutenant governor Mitch Landrieu, who
would lose a close race for mayor in the spring of 2006), proposed
replacing acting district superintendent Ora Watson, who took over
from Amato and is black, with Bill Roberti, who is the head of
Alvarez & Marsal in New Orleans and white. The proposal failed.
But it heightened racial tensions at a time when race had become as
turbulent an issue as the storm.
As if that weren’t enough, with the
city’s tax base wiped out by the hurricane, New Orleans could
no longer count on local funding for schools, nor would the tax
revenue be available to back a pre-Katrina approved bond issue.
State funding would also decrease, as funds were redirected to
other districts that had absorbed displaced New Orleans students.
But on September 30 came news that must have
looked like a life preserver to many school reformers and would
serve as a catalyst for change: a grant of $20.9 million from the
federal No Child Left Behind charter school program. The money was
earmarked to help Louisiana reopen existing charters as well as 10
new ones.
Immediately, school board vice president
Lourdes Moran and state and local lawmakers representing Algiers (a neighborhood in the relatively undamaged West
Bank district of the city) drew up a plan to charter all 13 schools
in that area. And in what appeared to be an end run around the
perennially contentious school board, Moran and Algiers legislators
presented the proposal to an invitation-only group of some 20
business, religious, and other community leaders on October 5
without telling the school board.
On October 7, the day of the next school board
meeting and with the board still unaware of Moran’s plans
(she had e-mailed the plan to her colleagues the night before, but
according to Education Week, some board members and Acting Superintendent
Watson said they hadn’t had a chance to read the application
before the meeting), New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin announced that he
would ask the governor for help in creating a citywide charter
school system. Nagin later explained that he had written a letter
to Governor Kathleen Blanco on October 5: “Give me the
charter schools I’ve been asking for—20 charter
schools, a citywide charter school district.” And on October
7, the day of the Orleans Parish School Board meeting, Governor
Blanco issued several executive orders to smooth the way for
charter schools in New Orleans. It was a measure of the school
board’s intransigence that, despite a devastating hurricane,
a $20 million grant, and a ton of political pressure, the Algiers
charter plan passed by only a 4–2 vote (with 1 abstention).
Board member Jimmy Fahrenholtz, a persistent
advocate of reform, expressed his disgust at the nay-sayers,
remarking, “[The state] should have taken us over a long time
ago.” Moran, who admitted that she had purposely kept
her colleagues in the dark about the proposal, was amicable in
victory. “I’m not saying that I want to do this because
I want to change governance,” she explained. “I am
interested in making sure we access all the resources necessary to
have a quality education.”
There was some momentary drama when a group of
mostly black leaders in Algiers won a temporary restraining order
against the plan and Acting Superintendent Watson and board
president Torin Sanders, who was one of the votes against the
Algiers plan, began to talk about OPSB opening four of its own West
Bank schools in November, but the resistance was short-lived.
Alvarez & Marsal told the board that the district didn’t
have the funds.
On October 28, as the restraining order
expired, the dissenting board members reversed course and OPSB
unanimously approved 20 charter school applications, including 13
on the West Bank to be overseen by the Algiers Charter School
Association (ACSA). OPSB required, among other things, that 20
percent of the students at each charter school be students
receiving free or reduced-price lunch, and 10 percent be
special-education students.
Meanwhile, New Orleans’ private schools were already starting to reopen. In
part because of its dismal public school system and in part because
of a strong religious, especially Catholic,tradition, New Orleans
had a robust private school network before Katrina: some 25,000
students, more than a third of the number in the public schools,
attended 92 different schools. (Nationally, only 10 percent of
K–12 students are enrolled in private schools.) And their
relative importance only increased after the storm. By the first
week of October, nearly 1,100 students were attending 2 Catholic
schools in Algiers. Soon after, the first 3 private schools opened
their doors on the East Bank, and by early November, 8 of the
city’s Catholic schools were open—all before a single
public school, charter or not, had reopened anywhere in New
Orleans. Even after the public schools began operating, the private
sector proved more nimble. By the spring of 2006 there were nearly
20,000 students enrolled in private schools, three-quarters the
prestorm figure, but well above the number that were back in public
school (see Figure 3).
Starting Fresh
While the immediate impetus for the charter
school plan was money, these new schools promised hope to a
devastated city school system. The new Algiers Charter School
Association emphasized the benefits of being liberated from Orleans
Parish School Board policies, which, according to the
association’s application, “currently consist of over a
one foot thick set of documents that have not been reviewed for
consistency and necessity in the past 20 years.” The charter
schools “would be able to start fresh” in developing
new policies and procedures to best meet the needs of students.
The difference between charter and regular
public schools was quickly apparent in Algiers when ACSA began
hiring teachers. Instead of giving first priority to teachers who
were at the school before Katrina and hiring them based on
seniority, as the union contract would have dictated, the charter
school group asked each teacher applicant to take a short test of
math and writing skills. It screened out 50 of 250 applicants based
on the test results alone.
Just as the charter school plan continued the
pre-Katrina trend of decreasing board control of New Orleans public
schools, the post-hurricane changes accelerated
the trend of increasing state involvement and paved the way for
many more charter schools. Gradually, the focus was less on the
financial benefits of charters and more on their advantages in
governance.
In early November Governor Blanco proposed an
expansion of the state’s authority to take over New Orleans
schools. Instead of applying only to “failing” schools,
the new powers would now pertain to all schools in districts
“in academic crisis” that had performance scores below
the state average. By state law, only Orleans Parish and one small
rural district met this criterion. As a result, OPSB would be
stripped of responsibility for 107 of the 128 public schools in the
district.
Anti-OPSB sentiment was running so high that
the legislature quickly approved the plan by an overwhelming
majority. The statehouse was even more eager to see the state take
the reins in New Orleans, handily passing an alternative plan (that
didn’t become law) to take over all schools in the district.
State board member Leslie Jacobs summarized the feelings of many
when she described OPSB to the Times-Picayune: “There’s no trust in the institution
and no outcome of results that would make the institution worthy of
the public’s trust.” Blanco signed her takeover plan
into law on November 30, 2005.
Most of the newly chartered schools had
below-average scores, but reapproval of their charters seemed very
likely as universities and private foundations such as the Gates
and Broad foundations, reluctant to get involved while the
dysfunctional OPSB leadership remained in place, were now calling.
According to Mayor Nagin, “They said, ‘Look, you set up
the right environment, we will fund, totally fund, brand-new
schools for the city of New Orleans. But we don’t want to go
through what you’ve been through. All that struggle
you’ve been having with that school board. We don’t
want to do that. We want to come in clean.’”
In January 2006, the state announced that it
was seeking charter operators for the 38 Recovery District schools
that were not too damaged to open in the 2006–07 school year.
Twenty groups hoping to run new charter schools submitted 43
applications to a review committee, comprising a team from the
National Association of Charter School Authorizers and local,
state, and national representatives. The committee granted approval
to 6 groups to run 10 schools.
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With the city's tax base wiped out by the hurricane, New Orleans could no longer count on local funding for schools, nor would the tax revenue be available to back a pre-Katrina approved bond issue.
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Will It Last?
Since the board’s charter-school
decision and the new state takeover law, progress has been steady.
The first public schools to open were 2 that had been chartered by
the state board of education long before the hurricane and were in
the relatively undamaged Uptown area of the city. The Orleans
Parish School Board reopened its first school, Benjamin Franklin
Elementary, with 146 students, also in Uptown, at the end of
November 2005. On December 14, 5 Algiers charter schools opened
their doors, “without a hitch,” for more than 1,300
students.
And so it continued. By mid-January, 14
charter and 3 traditional public schools were educating again,
serving about 9,000 students. By the spring, 25 schools were
running, only 4 of which, as mentioned,
were operated by OPSB. The combined registration at the 18 charter
schools and 7 traditional public schools was only 12,000 students,
less than 20 percent of the pre-Katrina public school population.
Alvarez & Marsal and state
officials were estimating that by January 2007, New Orleans public
schools would be serving 34,000 students—still barely half of
the pre-Katrina enrollment.
To the extent that the post-Katrina
developments are a natural continuation of earlier reforms, it
seems likely that the charter school momentum will continue. But to
the extent that charter schools came to dominate the New Orleans
education scene only because of a natural disaster, it is
reasonable to wonder whether the changes will stick. Will New
Orleans want to continue as the U.S. city with the highest
concentration of charter school students?
The federal government seems to hope so. In
June of 2006, Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings came to
Louisiana to announce the awarding of $24 million to create more
charters. The grant, reported the New
York Times, “is likely to cement
the role of New Orleans … as the nation’s preeminent
laboratory for the widespread use of charter schools.”
Another important factor on the side of
charter school advocates is the greatly diminished power of the
teachers union, which had often been an obstacle in earlier reform
efforts. When the state legislature swept 107 schools into the
expanded Recovery School District, it nullified the collective
bargaining agreement between the Orleans Parish School Board and
the union at those schools. Where it once had 4,700 members paying
$600 in dues each year, the union now has only 300 members. The
only schools with unionized teachers are the 4 schools operated by
OPSB.
For those who want to preserve the new
structure of New Orleans education, the rebuilding plan developed
by the education committee of Mayor Nagin’s Bring New Orleans
Back Commission is also promising. The education committee was
chaired by Dr. Scott Cowen, the president of Tulane University, who
was assisted by an “education Dream Team” of national
experts and local stakeholders. More than 1,500 students, parents,
teachers, and community members, representing every school open
prior to Katrina, offered input. In addition, the committee
interviewed more than 40 education experts and studied successful
districts around the country. Contributors to the final plan
included representatives from the New Orleans Public Schools, state
and local government, Louisiana universities, the U.S. Department
of Education, the Broad Foundation, the Gates Foundation, the
Council of the Great City Schools, IBM, Teach For America, the
American Federation of Teachers, New Orleans nonprofits, and the
Philadelphia, Norfolk (VA), and Oakland public school districts.
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Melvin Patterson listens to a lesson during seventh grade class at Samuel J. Green Charter School in New Orleans. Hurricane Katrina has given New Orleans' chronically underperforming school system a fresh start.
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According to the plan’s
“educational network model,” the school system would
include a mix of charter, contract, and system-run schools,
organized in small “networks” of similar schools. The
Algiers Charter School Association, for example, could be one
network within the larger school system.
All schools will have considerable
autonomy—including control over staffing, the authority to
set their own budgets, and the freedom to offer extended school
days or longer school years—but will be held accountable for
results, and funds will follow students as they choose the schools
that best meet their needs. A network manager will provide support
and accountability for each network of schools. A
“lean” district office will focus on policymaking
instead of top-down operational decisions, including a small
“strategy group” that will set learning standards and
ensure the equitable allocation of resources, but will not mandate
teaching methods or control school spending. The other major
component of the district organization will be a new central
support-services office that will provide optional assistance to
help schools obtain services such as food preparation and
transportation. One superintendent will direct the network
managers, strategy group, and services office and report to the
school board, whose role will be oversight, not execution.
The plan explicitly rejects an
all-charter-school system, but preserves many of the advantages of
such a system, such as flexibility and decentralization. The plan
also provides enough structure and support to help school leaders
be successful without impinging on their autonomy. In fact, it
seems that, within this framework, even the system-run schools will
be indistinguishable from charter schools.
Significantly, the school board, often a tough
sell on reform plans, has endorsed the Bring New Orleans Back
Committee’s educational network model. The state education
department will ultimately determine what reforms are implemented,
which signifies a major change in governance structure. But since
state officials participated in the committee’s planning
process and the proposals fit with the state’s general vision
for New Orleans education, it seems likely that the final plan will
resemble the committee’s plan.
To be sure, it’s just a plan, and large
school districts are certainly famous for their ability to churn
out weighty reports that go nowhere. But contrasting the New
Orleans outline with another high-profile school plan released
around the same time—D.C. superintendent Clifford
Janey’s “master education plan”—it seems
that New Orleans is considerably more serious about overhauling
school structure than Washington. Where the D.C. document is a
120-page hodgepodge, the New Orleans education blueprint is only 30
pages long, offering an ambitious, completely new vision for
transforming the way education is delivered. New Orleans seems
determined to preserve the reforms brought on by Katrina. The
question is whether it can sustain the innovative momentum in the
face of old habits—and new storms.
Kathryn Newmark is a research assistant at the
American Enterprise Institute, where Veronique de Rugy is a
resident fellow.
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