A local community organization filed an injunction with the
state Supreme Court challenging last month’s $15 million sale of the
475,000-square-foot shuttered William Penn High School property to Temple.
The William Penn Development Coalition, alongside residents
and local activists, held a press conference and rally July 14 on the East Side
Apron of City Hall.
The WPDC members advocated for the reversal of the sale’s
approval by the school district’s School Reform Commission. Additionally, they
announced their decision to take the issue to court, aiming to halt the sale by
way of an injunction.
According to statements on their Facebook page, the
coalition believes the SRC has blocked their efforts to purchase the school
since 2009. They additionally blame City Council President Darrell Clarke for
fast tracking the deal. Numerous WPDC leaders said this resulted in giving the
coalition only three days to submit a final bid by June 12, moved up from the
original Sept. 12 date.
“The allegations made by WPDC are completely baseless and
false,” said Jane Roh, a spokeswoman from Councilman Clarke’s office. “Council
President Clarke was long frustrated by the closure of William Penn High
School, and then by the School District’s failure to follow through on a
promise to return the site to public education use.
“The School District managed the building sale process, not
the council president,” Roh added.
After temporarily shuttering William Penn – which is on
Broad Street between Master Street and Girard Avenue – in 2010, the school’s
promised return began to fade as 24 schools in the district were permanently
closed in 2013.
The SRC declared the William Penn property permanently
closed last month. The following week, the SRC approved the property’s sale and
passed a resolution before the vote that suspended a code requiring a public
hearing, which in turn blocked the opportunity for public comment.
An SRC representative declined to comment on the injunction.
State Representative Curtis Thomas, a Democrat whose 181st
district encompasses both Temple and William Penn, said he believes the sale of
the property to Temple needs to be reversed.
“If the school district of Philadelphia needed money and
they needed it right away why would you take $15 million when you can get $32
million?” Thomas told The Temple News.
In 2013 the city assessed the William Penn property for
$32.5 million. But due to the school district’s dire finances – which required
the city to borrow $57 million this year to fill the school district’s budget
gap – the asking price for the property was set at a lower $15 million price
tag.
The community coalition formed in 2009 after the SRC
recommended to close the property, citing declining enrollment, sagging
academic performance and millions in needed repairs.
The coalition proposed the use of the property as a science,
technology, engineering and math public school that would allow roughly 700
students to attend and cost approximately $1.1 million to operate, said Inez
Henderson-Purnell, director of the coalition. She added that they could form a
partnership with Temple for instructor education and receive government support
in order to help fund the operational budget.
“You need to look at the broader implications here, the
threat to the community first of all,” said Priscilla Woods, treasurer of the
coalition. “It’s an opportunity for the school district of Philadelphia to redeem
itself with quality education. But it’s [also] the opportunity for this
neighborhood to continue to survive.”
“I don’t think it’s about a building anymore,” said Toni
Mcilwaine, who graduated from William Penn in 1977. “People are hurt about the
community. They’re just hurt that Temple could come by and snatch up
everything. They’re hurt that the educational system is just failing.”
In June Temple announced plans to partner with the Laborers’
District Council Education and Training/Apprenticeship Fund. The plans called
for the building facing North Broad Street to become a vocational training
facility. Temple plans to remove some of the buildings elsewhere on the
property to create additional field space for the lacrosse and soccer teams.
“We have good plans for that property,” university spokesman
Ray Betzner said. “We can do good plans for that property, for the neighborhood
and we think it is going to be a valuable asset and frankly there’s been no
change in that. We continue to believe in that.”
Betzner said the sale of William Penn to Temple has yet to
be finalized due to the injunction.
“Temple has wanted that building for a long time.” said
Yvonne Mills, a 1959 William Penn alumna. “I feel as though now that they have
it that, that’s it. You know the city is not going to change its mind about
selling the building.”
Source: Temple
News
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