As we wrote in March, the city of Chicago unveiled plans two months ago to close over 50 schools, mostly in the poorest areas.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan has sparked fierce protests, with thousands of protesters hitting the streets last weekend to oppose the school closures –arguing that they would put children at risk by having to travel further to overcrowded schools.
But while the city insists it must close these schools to close budget gaps, it has just announced that it will be dedicated as much as $100 million in public funds for the construction of a new basketball arena at DePaul University — which is about a third of the cost of the project.
Emanuel justified such a large public investment by saying that building the arena and surrounding event center will bring “huge opportunity” to the city of Chicago in the way that it would attract business and tourists.
Chicago
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I have never been a fan of Rahm Emanuel. He looks like a donkey and he doesn't seem very smart. This is just another episode which proves that's he's a total donkey.
Would the arena bring the city money?
Chicago
Read the rest in the link.
I have never been a fan of Rahm Emanuel. He looks like a donkey and he doesn't seem very smart. This is just another episode which proves that's he's a total donkey.
So let's see the brake down of why these schools are being closed, and not just cry whenever any school is closed.Chicago
Read the rest in the link.
I have never been a fan of Rahm Emanuel. He looks like a donkey and he doesn't seem very smart. This is just another episode which proves that's he's a total donkey.
My local school district had a consolidation a few years ago. It seems that whenever a school is closed there is a group of people who are apparently under contractual obligation to parrot specific sentences, like "the new schools will be over crowded" and "the children will be in more danger".This may improve school performance despite the complaints. Schools in the poorest areas of the urban blue states are a defacto separate but unequal system. Consolidating the students into better performing schools instead of pouring money down the drain might be mutually beneficial in the long run.
My local school district had a consolidation a few years ago. It seems that whenever a school is closed there is a group of people who are apparently under contractual obligation to parrot specific sentences, like "the new schools will be over crowded" and "the children will be in more danger".
That's just generic bull**** we always hear. It's not actually true until proven true.
You mean things cost money? But Obama said it was free? What do you mean that a school's funding has to come from somewhere?Well it logically is true that they will be more crowded. It really is the teacher's union getting pissy because it will cost them jobs usually in the end. I am all for lots of smaller neighborhood schools, but since people are not willing to pay for them, this is the best alternative to deal with failing schools and tight budgets as a practical matter.
You mean things cost money? But Obama said it was free? What do you mean that a school's funding has to come from somewhere?
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