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second chances

After shake-up, charter high school makes its case to stay open

After ousting their troubled leader and cleansing itself of a conflicted management organization, a charter high school community is hoping that it’s not too late to save their school.

In January, the Department of Education said it would close Williamsburg Charter High School after it failed to distance itself from its charter management network and Chief Executive Officer, both of whom are being investigated by the state attorney general’s office for financial improprieties.

At the time of the closure announcement, the DOE gave the school board 30 days to clean up its act. A lawyer hired to represent teachers and students from the school said today that those demands had been met on time.

On Feb. 2 — eight days before the deadline — the board finally terminated Eddie Calderon-Melendez, the CEO and founder of WCHS and the Believe Network, said the lawyer, Ellen Kimatian Eagan. She said that the school also severed ties with the Believe network and added new members to the board to comply with state charter guidelines.

Those conditions were placed on the school by the Department of Education last September when it originally placed WCHS on a one-year probation. But even then, the school’s board, which had included three people employed by the network, refused to comply.

“I feel that we’ve met every issue they’ve raised,” said Kimatian Eagan, who said Calderon-Melendez was terminated on Feb. 2. “We’ve made a lot of changes and we should remain open.”

About 75 students, teachers, and parents echoed their lawyer’s sentiments on the steps of Tweed this afternoon. They asked the DOE to reconsider its closure plan now that the school’s management has been shaken up.

“It has become increasingly clear that all levels of school operation warrant review and revaluation, and we as a faculty fully understand and support the need for change,” Kate Dalton, a teacher at the school, said in a speech.

One of the newly-elected, non-voting board members is Henry Gonzalez, who teaches “Participation in Government” at the school and helped organize the students to protest the closure.

“I know that there were some issues with management, but we’re in the middle of changing up a lot of that,” Gonzalez said.

WCHS has struggled academically in recent years as it has shuffled through three different principals. It earned two C’s and a D over the last three years on the city’s progress report and its graduation rate has fluctuated between 53 percent and 68 percent over that period.

But students at the protest were emotional in their pleas to keep the school open because of its close-knit community. Assama Ketegou, a New York University-bound senior, struggled to speak on the steps of Tweed as he spoke to classmates about his time at WCHS.

Nircely Batista, a senior who plans to attend City College, burst into tears when asked to describe what the school meant to her.

“I was a really lonely person before I came here. I literally didn’t have a single friend,” Batista said after the protest, surrounded by her classmates. “They helped me grow not only as a person, but as a student.”

A DOE spokesman said that the school’s fate was still undecided. A March 13 hearing with Kathleen Grimm, the Chancellor’s designee, will hear

“Kathleen’s findings are one piece of our overall decision to revoke or not,” said Matthew Mittenthal. “So, the determination to revoke is not yet final.”

 

  • http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/ Norm

    One of the most corrupt operations in the history of this city. And they were allowed to invade and undermine MS 126 which is now being closed. Beyond outrageous. 

  • bee

    This charter needs to be shut down! What happened in this case illustrates perfectly some of the many problems that stem from charter schools. Charter schools are authorized for 5 years. In a 5 year period, a hell of a lot  of malfeasance can occur. Given that verdict is still out on charters, given the lack of transparency in the charters, and the burden cast on neighborhood schools because of forced charter school co-location and things of that ilk, it is just irresponsible for the powers that be to keep authorizing charters. There were signs of trouble at WCHS since 2006!!!!!!!!!!! It’s time to close it down.

  • ANONYMOUS

    Im a student, the community is not very well “accepting” i mean its highschool , 4 years of your life depending on one building , let me live my 4 years complete , please *

  • http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/ Norm

     It is too bad you were caught up in this scandal. You are a victim of the policies of the Dept of Education and Bloomberg. So many other students have been victimized by closing schools or charters being pushed into their buildings, just as your school pushed into a school and victimized the kids in that school. You are collateral damage of the war on public schools by privatized interests. I hope you join the struggle, not to keep a corrupt operation open but in fighting for concepts of social justice.

  • JLyn

    too little too late Dept of Ed.  You gave away 8 years of tax payers money and the education of thousands of NYC youth.  You should  be ashamed.  Eddie Calderon-Melendez is a egotistical, self-centered, bi-polar crook who should rot in hell for what he has done and allowed to happen behind the scenes but there are Melendez’s everywhere in this world…I am much more angry at the fact that this was able to go for as long as it did with nothing more than sporadic slaps on the wrist.  What is to deter some other money hungry jerk from doing the same thing again…nothing…Eddie paid himself over 300,000 in salary and countless money under the table for 8 years and what was his punishment in the end?  He was asked to “step down”  Oh no…please don’t make me walk away from a school that I care nothing about after paying myself 3 million dollars over nine years…what a joke.  He should be in jail serving hard time for what he has put people through.  Instead he is at home…or in Cabo (he would frequent this place with one of the other “consultants” he paid quite frequently) counting his millions on his fat pudgy fingers.  You have won Melendez….I congratulate you on that…it is the families, teachers and students who have lost here. but you should be proud Eddie…you accomplished everything you ever set out to do…put your insignificant self in the spotlight and make money hand over fist in the meantime…I wonder how much of his millions are now part of his daschund breeding business which took up the majority of his time anyway.

  • F**k Bloomberg

    WCHS and Eddie Calderon Melendez are unfortunately not unique in the Bloomberg regime. I did not vote for Bloomberg as I saw this and other disasters coming. Anyone who thought an arrogant billionaire actually gave a sh*t about improving education for the poor must have had their head up their a**. Education in NYC (with the exception of insanely expensive private schools) is the WORST IT HAS EVER BEEN. 9/11 is the second worst thing that ever happened to my favorite city. Michael Bloomberg is the first.

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    Stay classy.  And kudos on the even classier history of posts in your profile. 

  • guest

    it would be really sad yo close WCHS down this school is the best even is stupid student say’s another thing this school actually care about you help you grow as a person and as a student .. is unfair bc of debt we get close down charter stay strong <3

  • http://ednotesonline.blogspot.com/ Norm

    “I wonder how much of his millions are now part of his daschund breeding business which took up the majority of his time anyway.”
    Ed Notes reported on Eddie’s doggie business years ago picking up on a post from Susan Ohanian. Eddie then started threatening Susan with vicious emails mocking her and threatening to “come up and see her.” A gangster handed a charter.
    Remember the $100 bounty for getting new students? The rotating people?
    Teachers were leaving anon comments on Ed Notes. But really where were all the adults who knew what was going on all this time? Why didn’t people come forward? That alone should be enough grounds to close it down.
    And even the one that was left open should be closed to wipe out all traces of Eddie Melendez. Public schools are manipulated into being closed down. When the head of a charter pays himself $300 grand no matter whether public or private an automatic red flag should go up. But the charter authorizing agents put on blindfolds. John King where are you hiding?

  • Anonymous

    I am a student at the WCHS. I been attending this school since i was in 9th grade. I am in the 11th Grade now, and my experience here has been very memorable. I came across so many wonderful and amazing people, and have grown great friendships with not only students but teachers as well. This school made me believe that all things are possible, when you believe in yourself. It really hurts me to know that i may not be able to graduate with my friends :’( ! PLEASE SAVE OUR CHARTER !!!

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