Category Archives: PCAE

Perpich Center for Arts Education

A Letter to EMID Families from Sue Mackert of Perpich

Dear EMID Parents, Guardians and Friends,

The strength of Crosswinds is due, in large part, to your ongoing advocacy, strength and sheer determination to do what is right for young people. The EMID Board voted for children this week. They voted to maintain a school that has proven itself to be needed as a school of choice—a school that successfully brings together a community of people able to embrace innovative education delivered in an environment in which all people are valued. I am certain that EMID Board members, in compliance with how governing Boards operate, will support the decision of the majority and will all work in harmony to support the adopted resolution.

You have placed your heart, soul and faith in Perpich to carry on the heritage of excellence you have maintained. We are focused, determined and engaged to make this happen.

We are continuing to assess information regarding the operation of Crosswinds and expect to have an outline prepared early next week for distribution to lawmakers. Your ongoing assistance is welcomed and needed.

I will maintain communication with you through this site and directly with Eric Celeste to keep you up-to-date and informed on how you may participate.

The Perpich Center is honored to be of service to you.

Respectfully,
Sue Mackert

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Press coverage of the transfer of governance

Tony Lonetree wrote for the Star Tribune: Woodbury school is saved, but work still needs to be done.

The board overseeing the integration school heeded parental wishes to save Crosswinds from closure by agreeing Wednesday night to turn the school over to the Perpich Center for Arts Education.

But the Perpich Center now must win legislative approval and funding by April 1 or see the building claimed, instead, by the South Washington County School District, under action taken by the East Metro Integration District (EMID) school board.

Christopher Magen wrote for the Pioneer Press: Harambee and Crosswinds: Transfer of the integration-focused magnet schools OK’d.

Crosswinds families will now turn their attention to the Capitol, where they have a short time to win over lawmakers in order to keep the school open.

“It means will still have a massive amount of work to do,” Zaiman said.

Judy Spooner wrote for the South Washington County Bulletin: South Washington County Schools in line for Crosswinds if Perpich can’t secure state money.

Deciding the future of Crosswinds, valued at $25 million including its property near Tamarack Road and Interstate 494, took a series of votes and amendments.

The final vote, to give the school to the Perpich center if it can secure funding from the Legislature, failed on a 5-5 tie.

After a short break, a second vote to amend the motion with a deadline of April 1, passed 6-4.

If District 833 acquires the school, it will be at no cost if the building is used for education. It was built with state funds.

EMID board votes for Perpich and Roseville plans

The EMID board voted to close Harambee and Crosswinds tonight. EMID will not be running schools next year. They also voted to accept the Roseville proposal to take over Hararmbee. The real question was, what would they do with Crosswinds.

The EMID board tonight voted to give the Perpich Center for Arts Education until April 1 to get the authority and funding it needs to run Crosswinds. If Perpich fails to get that authority and funding by April 1, the building will go to South Washington County.

This makes the legislative task for Perpich enormous. Perpich will have to seek a separate bill and early action by the Minnesota legislature. By forcing this to be an early vote, they have made this a very difficult task. Difficult, but not necessarily impossible.

Step by step.

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Come to the EMID Board Meeting, Wednesday 1/23

This is it. Since August 2011 we have been doing all we can do to see that our schools can keep doing the wonderful work they do. Over two years have gone into saving our schools, and the EMID board meeting tomorrow will decide their fate. Whether or not you have something you want to say to the board, just being present to witness the board action will send a message. Please come to the meeting tomorrow. The EMID board meeting will be at Harambee, Wednesday 1/23, 5:30pm. Childcare will be provided.

The big question of the meeting is whether the EMID board will allow Crosswinds a chance of holding together its program as part of the Perpich Center for Arts Education.

If you do want to testify, the public forum will begin at 5:30pm. Some of us will gather early, starting at 4:30pm, to share ideas and feedback on our planned testimony. Feel free to come early if you would like to get feedback yourself.

We are expecting that there may be media at the meeting tomorrow. The Pioneer Press, Star Tribune, and Bulletin have all been covering the story. Meanwhile integration has also been in the news, putting our board’s action even more in the public eye.

If EMID does allow the Perpich proposal to move forward, then our attention turns to the Minnesota Legislature. Stay tuned!

Star Tribune: Fate of Crosswinds Arts and Science School in Woodbury may lie with Perpich Center

Tony Lonetree writes in the Star Tribune: Fate of Crosswinds Arts and Science School in Woodbury may lie with Perpich Center. This article focusses more on the money and includes quotes from Perpich, our board, parents, and administration. The article ends with a not-quite-quote from Jim Gelbmann:

Wearing multiple hats in the situation is Jim Gelbmann, a South Washington County board member who also is an appointee to the EMID board.

The Perpich Center proposal has gained strength, he said, primarily as result of the hearing earlier this month. But he and a couple of EMID colleagues are concerned, he said, about the center’s ability to raise $2.5 million to $3 million as state leaders grapple with a $1.1 billion deficit.

Crosswinds, he said this month, is an expensive program, but an effective one for some students.

It’s likely, he said, that those students would not have succeeded if not for Crosswinds.

Pioneer Press: Crosswinds school will know its fate soon

Christopher Magan wrote a story for the Pioneer Press: Crosswinds school will know its fate soon. It is a terrific summary of the current situation and the decision the board faces this coming week.

“Certainly for families, this was a light we were excited to see shine,” Crosswinds Principal Bryan Bass said of Perpich’s proposal. “These parents searched for a place to call home. and to hear and know it could be in jeopardy is an awful feeling.”

Crosswinds families have coalesced behind the Perpich proposal, but it is far from a sure thing. They need to persuade lawmakers to give Perpich the authority to govern their school, then designate a source of money to operate it.

The story also includes some wonderful pictures like this one!

Bulletin: Curriculum key for Crosswinds backers

Amber Kispert-Smith writes in the Woodbury Bulletin: Curriculum key for Crosswinds backers. The article describes the hearing at Crosswinds and the choice facing the EMID Board.

The EMID School will review proposals during its Jan. 16 meeting before making a final decision at its Jan. 23 meeting.

“I do not envy you at all,” said Crosswinds special education teacher Jeff Parker. “I’m not here to change your mind, but I am going to push on your mindset – it’s not wise to spend energy fighting the change, but it is wise to spend energy shaping that change.

“I don’t believe that school closure is a term that I want to hear anymore because that is a mindset of decay; I want to shift our mindset to a more preservation mindset – turn away from closing and turn toward preserving the program. I don’t believe this is the end, it does not need to be the end.”

Transcript of Crosswinds Hearing

A number of you have been awaiting the transcript of the public hearing last week at Crosswinds and Harambee. EMID just put the Crosswinds transcript on their website (PDF).

Hearing Re The Proposed Closing of Crosswinds Arts & Science School, Public

Contents:

  • George Hoeppner Opens the meeting / 5
  • Shari Thompson presentation / 6
  • Jan Mohr presentation / 17
  • Dan Larson, parent / 21
  • Fred LeBlanc, parent / 23
  • Abby LeBlanc, student / 25
  • Kim Zaiman, parent / 26
  • Kathy Romero, teacher / 28
  • Jonah and Dalton Thomas, former students / 31
  • Leslye Taylor, parent / 34
  • Laurel LeBlanc, parent / 35
  • Ihsan Ingersoll, student / 37
  • Holly Ingersoll, parent / 38
  • Dave Bishop, parent / 41
  • Jeff Parker, teacher / 43
  • Bev Sellie, parent / 45
  • Kayleigh Schlenker, student / 47
  • Tim Stepan, teacher, union president / 49
  • Dan Stein, student / 52
  • Josh Kenow, student / 53
  • Casey Markovich, student / 54
  • Jill Markovich, parent / 54
  • Zander Danielson Sellie, former student / 56
  • Cornelius Rish, teacher / 59
  • Savannah Taylor, student / 61
  • Kelly DeBrine, parent / 63
  • Eric Celeste, parent / 64
  • Mike Boguszewski, parent / 68
  • Leah Bourg, teacher / 71
  • Amanda Hoffman and Madison Linke, students / 73
  • Susan Larson, parent / 76
  • Denise Dzik, teacher / 77
  • Rose Vang, student / 80
  • Anna Barker, teacher / 81
  • Shannon Hannigan, parent / 83
  • Tami Bayne-Kuczmarski, parent / 85
  • Yolanda Rivera, parent / 87
  • Jan Mohr, proposed findings / 88

EMID Board Discusses Perpich Option

Tonight the EMID Board spent most of it’s discussion time talking about the option to have the Perpich Center for Arts Education take over governance of Crosswinds. The board also heard briefly from the two other interested entities: South Washington County Schools (ISD 833) and Northeast Metro (ISD 916).

Once again, Perpich was the only one of the three enthusiastically embracing the July 2013 deadline originally proposed by the board. Perpich wants to take over Crosswinds starting next school year, keeping most of the program and staff intact. 916 said that they would certainly not continue the current Crosswinds program and would also not be ready to move into the building this fall. South Washington still prefers to have more planning time, but said that the would “do our darndest” to open the building in the fall if they were given clear indication that it was theirs by April 1st.

The board spent quite a bit of time interviewing Perpich Executive Director Sue Mackert about Perpich’s intentions and the legislative process Perpich must go through to acquire the authority and funding it needs to proceed. Mackert said that Perpich had already made appointments with various state agencies and was ready to contact legislators on January 24 if the EMID board decides to give Perpich that chance next Wednesday.

Superintendent Mohr described an option to give Perpich the first go at governance of Crosswinds while also giving South Washington an option to govern should Perpich not get legislative support. This would mean that the EMID board would not have to vote again to transfer governance to South Washington if Perpich runs into a road block at the Capitol.

However, some board members were hesitant about the risks involved in that plan. They noted that the legislative process might scuttle the Perpich proposal as late as May or June, well after South Washington’s April 1st deadline for planning anything for the 2013/2014 school year. This might leave EMID in the position of owning the Crosswinds building without any program to put in it since the school would already be closed. Mackert pointed out that she would probably get some early indications of such a failure at the legislature and would be very open about sharing the state of affairs with EMID and South Washington. She thought Perpich should have a pretty good read on the legislative progress by the end of March.

The board will move this matter to a vote at next week’s EMID board meeting, Wednesday 1/23, 5:30pm at Harambee. The public forum at the start of that meeting will be the last chance to be heard on this matter, so please come to the meeting and share what you have to say with the board.

We have video of key portions of this meeting (just click on “next” to see more videos below).

We also audio recorded this evening’s meeting, available as this MP3 file. Highlights include:

  • 00:18:00 Jim Gelbmann asks what would happen to Crosswinds if the board conveys the building to Perpich and Perpich fails to get authority and funding.
  • 00:42:45 to 01:05:00 an extended Q&A with Sue Mackert of Perpich.
  • 01:54:00 to 01:10:15 a brief set of questions for the 916 representative.
  • 01:10:30 to 01:13:30 a brief exchange with the 833 representative.
  • 01:15:00 a discussion of the risks of the Perpich proposal.

Perpich answers Crosswinds families questions

About forty people attended an extended question and answer session with Sue Mackert last night at Crosswinds. In the notes below times in [brackets] are times in the audio recording included at the end of this post. Sue is the Executive Director of the Perpich Center for Arts Education, which has made a proposal to take over Crosswinds.

Superintendent Mohr began with a few general introductory statements. She announced this week’s EMID board discussion meeting (Wednesday 1/16, 6pm, Harambee) and next week’s EMID board decision-making meeting (Wednesday 1/23, 5:30pm, Harambee). Public comment will only be invited at next week’s meeting.

Sue Mackert then made some comments [04:20] and began answering questions. “The only reason we are here is because you have all — family, staff, and students — built a wonderful wonderful program.” She stressed that Perpich wants to keep the school functioning “as is.” Perpich is a state agency, so there would be some “normal changes” that would be required, including work with the legislature to get authority and funding to run Crosswinds [09:00]. Perpich wants to be prepared to step in July 1, as the EMID board requested initially.

Would you change the makeup of the school? [10:00] Perpich intends to maintain 6-10 program at Crosswinds.

Would you keep maintenance and nutrition staff, teachers? [10:30] Yes, yes, yes. This is not an unfriendly takeover. What we have is special and Perpich will not “muck with it.”

Sue described the budget request process [11:00]. Don’t expect Crosswinds in the initial Governor’s budget. A special bill for Crosswinds would only emerge after an EMID board decision on 1/23. First deadline for bills is in March.

What is the Perpich experience working with the legislature? [12:40] Perpich has been working with the legislature for over 27 years. Perpich has done quite well because it is efficient and good at what it does. Sue feels it is appropriate to be accountable to the legislature and respond to legislator questions. “I always approach the legislature with a level of optimism.” Also working with Governor and his staff, Department of Education, and other agencies.

Will you still pull students from same districts that are currently at Crosswinds? [15:10] Yes, for the most part, though Perpich would not restrict attendance to only those districts.

Transportation? [15:55] Transportation is still “up in the air” since the due diligence work awaits the 1/23 EMID board decision.

Proportion of Saint Paul students? [16:30] Perpich is not tied to the same school districts and parent and guardian choice would drive student attendance, but the expectation is it would be similar to current attendance.

Would current students have to reapply? [17:20] No, no reapplication necessary to stay at Crosswinds.

11th and 12th grade? [17:50] Such an expansion for Crosswinds is not on the immediate horizon. Such changes would be part of a future planning process. But first goal is to stabilize and consistency. Perpich has no preconceived ideas, it wants to keep the school successful.

Year-round? [19:05] Yes, it will remain year-round.

Special education services? [19:10] Absolutely, these services would be present.

Who determines whether Perpich or one of the other two proposals will get to move ahead? [19:20] The EMID board will determine which proposal to move ahead. Perpich’s role would start after 1/23 when the board has made its decision.

Why does the educational budget take till May or June to resolve and what part can families play in that process? [21:00] “It is the largest pot of money and it is difficult.” Perpich intends to have a bill separate from the big education bill, so it might emerge sooner. But it is complex.

What are key messages for our own legislators, when should we call? [22:30] We will want letters and contact with your legislators. The first call Sue will make after the 23rd will be to the Governor’s office. “Then you will see me again and again and again.” Perpich currently has a 2/14 day to “take love to the Capitol.”

What is the Perpich board and will it oversee Crosswinds too? [24:30] PCAE is governed by a board appointed by the governor. They are the governing body for Perpich. They would be the governing body for Crosswinds. There would probably be an advisory committee to work with family and staff as well.

Enrollment is an issue, will your board work with us to help develop enrollment? [26:25] Yes, Perpich board will work to help staff develop a plan. But Sue said she was not “overly concerned in the beginning about enrollment” given the uncertainty of the past few years and next few months. But we will rebuild.

Is it important to have a “Plan B” as parents and staff? [28:00] Having a Plan B is solid advice. However, Sue thinks she will know before May if it won’t work out and she will let us know. “But I expect good things.”

Registration in February and bussing? [29:25] If you need to register in Saint Paul or elsewhere in February, go ahead and register so you have a Plan B. The bussing question will be addressed after 1/23. Our bill in the legislature would include what is required for the full program at Crosswinds.

Will the name stay “Crosswinds?” [30:30] Yes. The name is part of the value and identity.

Might Perpich run out of money after getting this started, have other state agencies failed as they worked on educational facilities? [31:20] Three sets of state agency schools: academies for deaf and blind, correctional institutions, and Perpich. Sue stresses that neither she nor Governor would support a takeover of Crosswinds on a short term basis. The funding is critical to success.

Would Perpich bring more after-school programming back? [34:50] Not sure yet, not sure what the current budget supports.

Would we bring back the seven period day? [35:35] It gets a little ahead of ourselves to consider these changes now.

Where is the Perpich Arts High School? [36:30] In Golden Valley, on the site of an old Lutheran College.

Does a change in Governor turnover the Perpich board? [37:30] Appointments to the board are staggered, so it never turns over all at once. Perpich also has the opportunity to advise the Governor on appointments.

Could Perpich get governance but not funding? [38:30] There is a possibility that the EMID board could give Perpich a green light but the legislature not provide authority and funding. Superintendent Mohr said this was an issue for the EMID board. This would impact decisions for staff and families. There is “an unsureity” said Mohr.

When will we know for sure, one way or the other? [41:00] The board deliberates on 1/16, makes its decision on 1/23. Two decisions, one on school closure, then another decision on transfer of governance.

[42:18] A point is made about families role in communicating our desires to the EMID board. Families must be clear about our tolerance for uncertainty in pursuing the Perpich option. Stress that our board could allow the Perpich option and if it fails, turn the facility over to one of the other proposals.

Have all member districts been informed of all proposals? [44:20] A student relates an experience with a superintendent that indicates they may not be fully aware of the extent of the Perpich proposal. Mohr describes a special meeting with superintendents and business managers.

Public comment at board meetings? [46:00] No public comment on 1/16, but there will be a public forum on 1/23 at 5:30pm at Harambee.

If Perpich does not get funding would EMID board fund the takeover? [47:20] Probably would not fit within the guidelines of the joint powers agreement. Also, the board will have already voted to close the schools before they vote on governance.

[48:30] A teacher makes a plea to keep the Harambee and Crosswinds closures in sync so that employee rights are preserved.

Would the EMID maintenance reserve transfer to Perpich (or Roseville)? [49:20] This maintenance money would be transferred to member districts under the joint powers agreement.

What kind of offers will be made for teacher positions? [51:20] Perpich intends to keep the staffing the same. It is normal during a takeover for people to reapply for their positions. There is a legal process that will have to take place, but the intent is to make this a smooth transition that protects employees.

How did it happen that the Arts High School was set up as 11th and 12th grade? [53:10] This was a compromise that came about partly due to the housing situation at the high school. Perpich actually also has authority for a 13th year, though that has not been used yet.

What would the relationship between 6-10 Crosswinds and 11-12 Arts High School be? [55:10] The synergies are very strong between the programs. Arts and science, global initiatives, and a commitment to profession development for teachers are all common opportunities. Each will have its own integrity, but there will also be some potential for collaboration between the two.

[57:20] Student points out some of the current Perpich involvement with Crosswinds students and events.

[58:20] Sue wraps up with: “This is tough on everyone. I am sorry that you are in this position. I am proud the EMID board is going to do something about it. Just continue to support one another through all of this. Thank you very very much.”

The times in [brackets] above refer to this MP3 audio recording of the question/answer session.

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