Sitting at a small picnic table in Minneapolis' Luxton Park, Halimo Hashi's eyes grew large when she said that Pratt Community School, where two of her children go, means "everything" to nearby Somali families.
Her friend Shamso Ahmed learned to speak English in adult classes at Pratt, a K-5 school that will close next year if the Minneapolis school board approves the district's downsizing plan tonight. Once a month, Somali moms go to the school for a breakfast club. Their children walk the five minutes to school in a caravan, the "walking bus" they call it, so they don't have to go alone.
"It is our light," Hashi said Friday. "We support Pratt, we don't want it to close."
Pratt is one of four schools that would close next year as the district attempts to deal with years of declining enrollment and multimillion-dollar deficits.
But Pratt's story -- the story of parents fighting for a school they believe in against the district's very real and pressing reasons to close it -- is echoed citywide. Anxieties that Pratt parents feel are also felt by parents of the nearly 5,800 students who could be affected by the plan.
"If we lose the school, we lose the community, too," Hashi said.
Fighting the closure
Pratt is the smallest school in the Minneapolis district, with 159 students. Parents laud its diversity: 60 percent of the school's students are black, about a quarter are white, and American Indian, Asian and Hispanic students make up the rest of the student body. Three-quarters of the students qualify for free and reduced-price lunches.