The Philadelphia School District has asked the state Supreme
Court to swiftly reject a lawsuit that aims to block the sale of William Penn
High School to Temple University.
The cash-strapped schools desperately need the $15 million
from the sale of the North Philadelphia property, according to court documents
the district filed last week. The district's deficit - which already stands at
$81 million - would grow by $11 million without the net proceeds from the sale.
"Any delay in closing the sale and receiving these
funds will harm the School District greatly," the district said in a court
filing that asks the justices to act on the matter "as soon as reasonably
possible."
The request came in response to a suit filed three weeks ago
by the William Penn Development Coalition, a neighborhood group that opposes
the sale.
The group, which bid $5.1 million for the 14-acre site, has
asked the court to stop the sale to Temple and rule that the "expedited
process" the School Reform Commission followed when it approved the sale
in June violated state law.
The SRC previously voted to suspend parts of the state
school code to speed the sale and deal with the financial crisis.
In its response, the district said the sale was lawful. The
SRC had held a hearing in 2009 before it voted to close the building "for
at least two years," the district said.
At that time, Superintendent Arlene C. Ackerman told
neighbors the district would reopen the building within five years as a career
and technical school for district students. In the face of deteriorating
finances, the district said it could not afford to make the necessary repairs
and upgrades.
The school is one of several unused buildings that the
district has put on the market to raise revenue.
The district said the SRC was ready to complete the sale to
Temple, but the university's title insurer has refused go to closing while the
coalition's petition is pending in court.
The coalition's plans called for mixed-use retail and an
academy focused on math, science, technology, and engineering.
Temple said it intends to use the property for athletic
fields and recreation space for its students. The university said the building
fronting North Broad Street would house a union-run job-training academy.
Source: Philly.com
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