Saturday, December 30, 2017

Main points from June 26, 2008 Missoula Independent article on lease extension of Prescott School to Missoula International School


The following statements are from a Missoula Independent article written in June (June 26, 2008) by Patrick Klemz during the lease renewal discussions of Prescott School by the private spanish emersion school, Missoula International School.



   Getting schooled

     The renewal of an MCPS building lease angers residents


'Jeanne Joscelyn and Ross Best are like conversational pad thai.' 

The article goes on to say - 

The pair’s message, however, is one in the same. Joscelyn and Best serve as the mouthpiece for what’s informally known as “the Opposition,” a group of Missoula County Public Schools (MCPS) district residents highly critical of the board of trustees for its practice of leasing closed school buildings to private competition. The Opposition’s latest battles focus on Prescott, a Rattlesnake neighborhood middle school closed in 2004 and leased out to the Missoula International School that same year for less than $1 per square foot.' 

"One year remains on the International School’s five-year lease, but the MCPS board is already talking renewal. The topic first came up during a June 10 public meeting of the trustees, but a lack of quorum prevented the vote. With MCPS still working on a building appraisal, Opponents complain that trying to rush ahead a lease renegotiation now would be irresponsible,"

“You are trustees—entrusted with public school buildings. Your behavior has not been worthy of trust,” Best railed at the last board meeting. “It has, in fact, been disgraceful and this is shaping up to be one more disgraceful action.”


Joscelyn and Best suspect interested parties wanted to get the deal sewn up before the July retirement of Superintendent Jim Clark, a proponent of dispensing schools deemed as excess. But the superintendent says the June 10 agenda item intended to conditionally approve the lease and then let MCPS iron out details later in the year when the appraisal is finished. 

The Opposition came together during the similar Roosevelt School controversy, in which MCPS came under fire for the 2005 sale of another closed school to a Catholic education foundation after it had passed on a separate and higher offer.
Trying to avoid a similar result, Opponents began tracking the paperwork on Prescott back before its board-ordered closure.

The Opponents are concerned that selling schools like Prescott leaves the district standing short should it one day need more classroom space. The idea of public support for the privatization of local education also doesn’t sit well with many residents. UM mathematician David Patterson, a critic of the 2004 Prescott deal, points out that cheap leases don’t make fiscal sense when one takes into account the amount districts lose when students defect to private schools.

“There’s no rocket science here,” Patterson says.            “Doing nice things for private schools
is not a part of the public interest.”


District records show the current contract on Prescott costs the International School about half as much per square foot as Walla Walla University’s lease of the nearby Mount Jumbo School.

“We recognize the current base price is low based on the market value,” says Missoula International School trustee Matt Lunder. “The problem with their argument is that it assumes if the board voted to not extend our lease that the Missoula International School would say ‘Shucks, lets just send all of our kids to public school.’ We would just go somewhere else.” (blogger's note- Matt Lunder lived on Van Buren, just a couple of blocks from Prescott School. The enrolling of neighborhood children was a concern of some responsible MCPS Trustees during the 2004 lease discussions.)

Yet, Opposition members’ beef goes deeper still. They allege MCPS’s long-standing trend of favorable treatment toward the private school is a direct result of special interest engineering—something Best calls “rigged transactions.”
Joscelyn points to one person in particular: former International School board president and current MCPS chair Toni Rehbein. Though Rehbein recused herself from both the 2004 lease vote and the June 10 renewal item, she advocated extending the International School a new lease at various meetings and once queried publicly whether the lessee would go for purchasing Prescott outright.

The Opposition argues the ethical problems speak for themselves, though the situation does not technically constitute a violation of office. According to county attorneys, only official action can be cited as a conflict of interest under Montana code.

“When I was involved in the Missoula International School, my daughter was
in preschool,” Rehbein says. “I don’t have any personal interest in it at all.” (psm blogger - See MIS documents on lead blog post at beginning of blog to see the disingenuousness of this statement)


'One International School report from 2000 shows Rehein’s name circled numerous times and tagged with the commentary, “To whom is Toni Rehbein loyal?”


“The facts don’t support that. It’s not character assassination—we have documents,” Joscelyn responds. “This is just the truth.”

Some history from an early Missoula family who settled in the Rattlesnake area!


PART ONE – EARLY FAMILY HISTORY IN THE RATTLESNAKE VALLEY (PRESCOTT SCHOOL AREA)

The following is an excerpt from my grandmother’s family history, a 6-page typed document that she created in I think the 1960’s. My grandmother’s name was Ellen Nellie Tiffany McAlear.
This excerpt comes from page 3. The document is really about her mother and father’s lives, (Nellie May Magee Tiffany and Willard Tiffany- my great-grandparents), however, includes some of her personal history as well.

The reason why I’m including this history in a post on the Prescott School Missoula blog is because the histoy takes place in the Rattlesnake area, thus the Prescott School area of Missoula. My grandmother also told me that she attended sewing classes at Prescott School (of course it would have been the first Prescott). I’m not sure about where her other schooling took place in the Rattlesnake – she lived here until 1920 -something I need to look into since the info was not passed on to me.

Again, from page 3 of 6 of my grandmother’s family history includes early Missoula history, specifically lower Rattlesnake history follows - 
“…The next year they moved on to Missoula (1907). My mother was expecting another baby to arrive in June of 1908. Because of an unusual heavy snow during the winter and days on end of rain in the spring; the Missoula river {now named the Clark Fork} washed out the bridges leaving no Dr. care on the south side of the river, where my parents were now living. They had rented a home in Orchard Homes until I was born and they could find a place to buy. The water that went over the banks of the river circled the Tiffany home but all was well in doors. {This event is now known as the1908 flood} A girl had been wished for and there I was, and mother was doing fine, too.

 A home was bought up Vanburen (my grandmother’s spelling) St. near Rattle Snake Creek (again, my grandmother’s spelling). Dad built a screened out (my grandmother’s spelling) door kitchen near the big apple tree, in the back yard. Lots of home grown fruit and vegetables and fresh air and rest must have been all that was needed. "

Look for Part 2 of early living in the Rattlesnake by my grandma (whom I loved so much!)

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

How many days since that fateful day of March 25, 2004 at 1 a.m. when the MCPS Board of Trustees closed Prescott School

Often I have wondered how many days, not years, since our beloved Prescott School was closed.

In the wee hours of the morning of March 25, 2004, after many people had left the meeting at the South Avenue administration building, the Missoula County Public Schools Board of Trustees voted to close THREE schools in the northeast section of our city. 

The schools: Rattlesnake Middle School and Prescott School in the Rattlesnake Valley, and Mount Jumbo School in East Missoula.

If one goes to www.daycalc.appspot.com  one can find out this information.

According to the above website it has been 4,920 days since that disastrous vote that closed Prescott School which so negatively effected our city, our neighborhood, and our students.

Again, it has been 4,920 days since the closure of Prescott School in Missoula.

Monday, September 11, 2017

Where are the people who closed Prescott School and then leased it to the private Missoula International School?

Where are the people who were responsible for closing our most treasured Prescott School?
Remember - the people, the Missoula County Public Schools Trustees, are by name:

Board Chairwoman - Rosemary Harrison
Trustee Jenda Hemphill(aka Jenda Cummings) later Board Chairwoman
Trustee Toni Rehbein (aka Toni Smartt) and later Board Chairwoman
Trustee Scott Bixler
Trustee Joe Toth

The above Trustees voted in the July, 2004 MCPS Board Meeting. This meeting was the SECOND vote on the Prescott School closure issue.

The Missoula County Public Schools Trustees who voted on March 24 to close the school were)(only a 48 day process!)

Rosemary Harrison (see above)
Jenda Hemphill (see above)
Naomi Kimbell (aka Naomi DeMarinis)
and
David Merrill

Trustees who did not vote for the closure were: Suzette Dussault, Colleen Rogers, and Carol Bellin.

As one can see only four MCPS Trustees can radically transform  a neighborhood, a school district, and the city as a whole. It is quite apparent that there needs to be a tweaking of the process of school closures and also for school sales.

To get back to the topic on where the Trustees who voted for the closure of Prescott School are today -

Without too much research I believe that most of the people listed are still in Missoula. Rosemary Harrison is now a realtor, Scott Bixler was and still is I believe, working for the Forest Service, Joe Toth was and still is, I believe, working as a fireman. Jenda Hemphill, I have heard, unfortunately, has a disease, which I won't mention here. Naomi Kimbell, I believer is writing like her father did before her. And, I will have to see if I can find out where David Merrill works.

The point is that all of these people are now leading their own lives away from their past school board duties and none are taking responsibility for the troubles which they have caused. None are being held accountable for our crowded schools, for the busing of half of our school children due to the school closures for which they voted, for all the increased infrastructure building, etc. Wouldn't it have been just as easy to be cautious and NOT to have closed the schools, not to have sold a school, and not to have leased a school to a private school? Yes, but politics got in the way.

And politics is still in the way - One of the above Trustees was voted out of office, and soon after helped to start the Missoula Education Foundation. This foundation works closely with the school district. All the better to be close to MCPS business, including being part of the bond committee) and to manipulate outcomes of decision making. This Trustee also has children and grandchildren - so is his/her hands in school business affecting her grandchildren. Do they attend a school with the International Baccalaureate program is instituted by MCPS for example?

All things to consider so that lessons can be learned for future decisions.

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Small Versus Large Schools: The Truth About Equity, Cost, and Diversity of Programming

This report looks like a great source of information  on small schools - Prescott is the perfect small school. Prescott did not ever need to be closed and definitely needs to be reopened!



Small Versus Large Schools: The Truth About Equity, Cost, and Diversity of Programming

Sunday, April 16, 2017

2017 New Post! Independent article from 2008 regarding the lease renewal of Prescott School

Getting schooled: The renewal of an MCPS building lease angers residents



Please read this article even though it is older it is still relevant to the situation of our beloved Prescott School being closed. Prescott needs to be reopened!