The former William Penn High School, a sprawling structure
on North Broad Street, was permanently closed by the School Reform Commission
on Thursday night and sold to Temple University for $15 million.
Part of the property will be razed and turned into athletic
fields and recreation space for Temple students. The school building fronting
Broad Street will remain, and will house a job-training academy run by the
Laborers' District Council Education and Training/Apprenticeship Fund. It will
offer training in construction crafts and general education topics.
The sale happened over the strong objections of some
community members - who had been promised a new life for the high school when
it "temporarily" closed in 2009. Then-Superintendent Arlene C.
Ackerman said at the time that the school would reopen within five years as a
career and technical academy for district students.
Commissioner Sylvia Simms was the lone vote against the
closure and transaction, saying after the meeting that she thought the
community had been "bamboozled."
State Rep. W. Curtis Thomas (D., Phila.) told the SRC he was
"highly disappointed, troubled, and angry" as a result of the sale.
Temple president Neil D. Theobald, in a statement, said the
sale would put the building to good use.
"Our partnership with the Laborers' District Council
Fund furthers Temple's long-standing mission to provide excellent educational
opportunities to the community," Theobald said. "With an LDC job-training
academy in the heart of North Philadelphia, many more residents will have
convenient access to a range of pathways to success."
The commission also voted against renewing New Media
Technology Charter School's operating charter on several grounds, including
lackluster academic performance, improper admission policies, and shaky
finances. The school had a $362,000 deficit at the end of the last fiscal year.
Located in the Stenton section, New Media has 451 students
in sixth through 12th grades.
The troubled charter's founding board president and original
CEO were sent to prison two years ago after pleading guilty to federal fraud
charges.
Hugh C. Clark, the one-time board president, and Ina Walker,
a former CEO, admitted stealing $522,000 in taxpayer money to prop up a
restaurant, a health-food store, and a private school they controlled.
To obtain a new operating charter in 2010 while the federal
investigation was continuing, the SRC required New Media to sever ties with
Clark and Walker, replace its board, and adopt new financial and ethics
policies.
Several New Media supporters said major changes have been
made in the last year, and they pressured the SRC to give it more time to
improve.
Board president Wanda Bailey-Green said that although "New
Media has not yet attained the standard of excellence that we have set for
ourselves," it had momentum and the right people in place to do so.
The SRC, however, voted 3-1 against renewal, with Simms
dissenting and Farah Jimenez abstaining because of a potential perceived
conflict stemming from her husband's law firm.
Source: Philly.com
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