South Minneapolis parents are mobilizing against a school district plan that would bunch magnet schools in the center of the city to address racial disparities. They say the proposal would strip several South Side schools of the very programs that make them special and draw families to the district.
Frustrations are swelling as Minneapolis Public Schools leaders mull five blueprints that could reshape the district for years to come. Anxious families showed up en masse to parent-teacher and school board meetings last week to discuss their children's uncertain future. Four of the plans would upend the district's makeup by cutting and relocating magnet schools and redrawing attendance boundaries, which could shuffle nearly two-thirds of the district's 33,000 students to new schools.
Many parents have lamented the potential upheaval and urged the school board to delay its April vote and come up with new options. Eight schools — including Clara Barton, Windom, Dowling and Armatage — would lose their magnet status under these proposals, while five to six community schools would gain such programs.
"The district is saying they want more equity and they want students of color to have more access to programs, but they're not asking the families what they want," said Silvia Ibáñez, a Latina immigrant from the Kingfield neighborhood whose two daughters attend seventh grade at Clara Barton Open School and first grade at Windom Dual Immersion School.
Only two models would make up for cutting Windom's Spanish immersion program by adding one at Green Central. The district would do away with the open magnet entirely, as it would with its urban environmental magnet at Dowling. District leaders say those that lose their magnet status could still apply for specialty school designation but the programs they want shouldn't compete with offerings at magnet schools.
Ibáñez said the changes would devastate her seventh-grader, Amaya, who likes Barton's open school model because it makes her feel "so welcomed and happy." And her first-grader, Camila, would miss Windom's language immersion, which makes kids "really feel proud about their culture."
District leaders drew up plans with a nearly $20 million budget deficit in mind and a desire to stem the flow of students out of the district. There's an increased urgency among leaders to curb declining enrollment and rescue a school system once flush with students.
The district currently has about 14 magnets and spends around $4.6 million transporting students to those schools, which are mostly clustered in the southern part of the city. District data show the current structure has led to more segregated schools, a growing student achievement gap and worse outcomes for schools in north and northeast Minneapolis.