On February 17, 2012 students, parents demand the removal of Piccolo and Casals from “Turnaround” list.

On February 20, 2012

Press release:

PARENTS END PICCOLO ELEMENTARY SCHOOL OCCUPATION AFTER CPS BOARD AGREES TO MEET IN RUN-UP TO WEDNESDAY BOARD MEETING

Chicago, IL – Parents ended the Piccolo Elementary School occupation at
3:30pm yesterday after Vice President of CPS Board of Education, Jesse Ruiz,
met with them at Piccolo and committed the rest of the Board members to meet with the parents regarding their demands that the board reverse its decision to “Turnaround” Piccolo and Casals and engage with them meaningfully on a community proposal to promote educational excellence at the school.

“Thank you to the hundreds that came out in the cold to support us and show
that they care about our kids,” said Piccolo parent and Local School Council
Chair Latrice Watkins.

The Board of Education plans to vote on Wednesday, February 22 to hand over management to AUSL, the Academy for Urban School Leadership. The private ‘non-profit’ firm has close political ties to City Hall.  Despite receiving millions in additional funds from CPS and private entities that regular public schools do not get access to, AUSL ‘results’ are little better than – and in some cases lag behind – district averages.

The protest and occupation to resist takeover by AUSL was led by a core
group of committed Piccolo parents who were acting on behalf of 288 parents
who had voted ‘No’ to the Turnaround of their school in January but were
ignored by CPS. They are asking that CPS – the Chicago Public Schools
administration – instead invest in the current school and provide current
staff with the types of resources and funding that the district currently
plans to funnel to AUSL. Their core appeal: Education should be about what
parents want for their children not what’s good for politically connected
private school operations.

Parents were also critical of the way authorities handled the occupation.
They blocked a group of Piccolo parents from getting back in the building to
relieve other parents and did not let food or supplies in the building,
including for one diabetic parent, right of use to her medications. That
treatment has, nonetheless, left parents undeterred.

“I got the strength to stay [in the school] through the pain because I knew
I was on the side of justice and this will inspire other schools to stand up
to privatization,” said Elisa Nigaglioni, parent occupier and member of the
West Humboldt Park Community Action Council, who met for a year to draft a
proposal for improving Piccolo, Casals and Cameron elementary schools.

Parents and their supporters have vowed to defend their children’s school –
and the public right to neighborhood public education – in their scheduled
meetings with board members. Parents are guardedly optimistic as they wait
for a call from CPS to confirm the times for the hour-long meetings on
Monday and Tuesday with individual Board members to inform them on their
concerns with AUSL and have a real conversation about their community
counter-proposal.

“It’s shameful that it had to come to this for CPS to engage meaningfully
with parent proposal,” said Cecile Carroll of the community group Blocks
Together, which supported the parents’
occupation.

Blocks Together, the parents and their allies have vowed to step up efforts
to prevent what they see as a wholesale assault on accountable public
education in the city.

Also see Piccolo Parents Call Victory After School Occupation

You do what you have to do for your children.

Go Piccolo!

Dora