REPRESENTATIVE MARIE ST. FLEUR
She's One of Us.

 Rep. St. Fleur & Mayor Menino Back Landmark Education to Improve Boston's Underperforming Schools

“I am happy to be working with Mayor Menino to file legislation that will have a positive impact on the quality of education offered to children in Boston,” said Rep. Marie St. Fleur of Dorchester, the former Chairwoman of the Legislature's Committee on Education and who filed the legislation on behalf of the Mayor. “This legislation forces us to put the needs of children in underperforming schools first, by allowing an expedited pathway to access and quality.”

           

Vice Chairwoman

Joint Committee on

Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure





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ROOM 43, STATE HOUSE

TEL: (617) 722-2030

FAX (617) 722-2215

Rep.MarieSt.Fleur@hou.state.ma.us


The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

House of Representatives

State House, Boston 02133-1054



MARIE ST. FLEUR

REPRESENTATIVE

5TH SUFFOLK DISTRICT

BOSTON, MA



May 13, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Nancy Rachel Rousseau

Staff Director 617.722.2030



BOSTON -- Massachusetts State Representative Marie St. Fleur (D-Dorchester) led a second fact-finding delegation to Haiti from March 17-March 22. She was joined by two of her colleagues: Representatives Martin Walsh and John Quinn. The purpose of the delegation was to help fight illiteracy and promote infrastructure construction and repair on the Island. The delegation, consisting of fifteen members, hopes their efforts will help prevent the number of storm-related deaths witnessed on the Island last year.

The Island was battered by four major storms—Fay, Gustav, Hanna and Ike—in August and September of 2008. Also, two schools collapsed in Pétionville claiming the lives of at least 90 people and garnering worldwide attention. During the six-day visit, the delegation met with the leaders of various ministries and dialogued with representatives of international donor institutions about the primary education system; the construction and rehabilitation of existing physical infrastructure, and the expansion of tourism in the city of Milot.

Currently, members of the delegation are actively working on all of the information they gathered during the visit as well as figuring out the next steps on how to translate the data into concrete results.

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  Mayor Menino Submits In-District Charter School Bill

Legislation gives Boston key tools to improve under-performing schools through in-district charters and pay-for-performance benefits

 Yesterday, Mayor Thomas M. Menino submitted state legislation that, if passed, will provide city officials with key tools to drastically improve the performance of chronically underperforming schools. The legislation allows officials to turn underachieving schools into in-district charter schools and permits pay-for-performance incentives to encourage teachers to innovate and improve their students’ performance.

 “I’m the Mayor of all of Boston’s kids and I submitted this legislation because of its capacity to bring the radical changes necessary to improve all of our schools,” said Mayor Menino. “I’ve heard from many parents, teachers and principals that our school days start too late or end too early and that new, good teachers are re-assigned, that innovation is stifled and that in many cases principals hands are tied – I want to help untie those hands and give schools the tools they need to succeed.”

  Under the proposed law, newly formed in-district charter schools across the state will remain part of the district which they serve and will be under the control of the respective school boards and superintendents. In-district charters will not be bound by previously established agreements regarding the removal of principals, administrators, or teachers, or collective bargaining agreements with unions and will operate under performance contracts stipulating improvement goals. They will also be continuously monitored to ensure that those goals are met.

Some of the monetary incentives to reward successful teachers cover various areas including student attendance, safety and discipline, performance on the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System, as well as progress in other various academic areas like English-Language Learners and special education.

“I am happy to be working with Mayor Menino to file legislation that will have a positive impact on the quality of education offered to children in Boston,” said Rep. Marie St. Fleur of Dorchester, the former Chairwoman of the Legislature's Committee on Education and who filed the legislation on behalf of the Mayor. “This legislation forces us to put the needs of children in underperforming schools first, by allowing an expedited pathway to access and quality.”

    There are three important distinctions between in-district charters and traditional charter schools:

 o       Funding stays within the local school systems and accountability does too, unlike current charter schools.

o       Because in-district charters will be targeted to lowest performing schools, there is a greater likelihood that those students who are most in need will be enrolled.

o       And unlike traditional charters, not just one school is created but a whole outstanding school system is created.

 

 Mayor Menino was clear when the legislation was filed yesterday that only a very select number of schools that are in clear need of drastic improvement will be converted to in-district charters. Mayor Menino also emphasized that the legislation takes first priority and that only if it fails will city officials seek to lift the cap on traditional charter schools.

 

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Call Rep. St. Fleur's Office for More Information
617-722-2030

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