Concept Schools’ proposed Chatham site was effectively shut down by Chicago Public Schools’ CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett who cited a laundry list of problems with the school site, including toxic mold, asbestos flooring, and falling ceiling tiles.
Likewise, Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy-Clay Evans site will not open as scheduled simply because there is no building to open. According to an article printed in the Chicago Sun Times, and per Concept’s President, Salim Ucan, Concept Schools’ Jenkins location could not house students because the scheduled renovations could not be completed before the start of the school year.
So that leaves a lot of angry parents, 400 befuddled students, and 40 staff personnel wondering exactly where they will land in this “holy crap – what do we now?” educational limbo created by Concept Schools.
It would seem that with the amount of money the Gulenists collect from our tax coffers, that at the very least they could find something other than a toxic dump site to use for their school location. Perhaps their greedy aspirations and race to circumvent the public education system in order to further their personal agenda has fostered an ambivalent and non-compliant attitude towards student safety.
Students and parents have enough to contend with, especially those struggling with familial poverty -- and at the very least – deserve to have their children educated in a wholesome, safe, and secure learning environment that lest we not forget -- is ultimately funded by the American tax payers.
Below are two articles about the Chicago Concept’s ghost schools written by Becky Schlikerman of the Chicago Sun Times:
http://politics.suntimes.com/article/chicago/leaky-roof-mold-asbestos-found-concept-schools%E2%80%99-chatham-site/sun-08242014-823pm
Leaky roof, mold, asbestos found at Concept Schools’ Chatham site Sun, 08/24/2014 - 8:23pm
By: Becky Schlikerman
Standing water from a leaky roof.
Visible mold and a pungent smell that hangs in the air.
Floor tiles made of asbestos.
Those were just some of the problems Concept Schools had to contend with before getting a school building near Chatham ready for kids next month after scrambling to find a new location this summer, according to documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.
Chicago Public Schools CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett last week announced she’s not letting the school open because the South Side building, which once housed a private school, won’t be ready for students next month.
“Mold is visibly evident throughout many of the classrooms. The mold and mildew is so bad, that a handful of the classrooms cannot be accessed due to the noxious, overwhelming, suffocating scent,” an inspector wrote for CPS officials in July.
The property that was to house Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy-Clay Evans is made up of two buildings. One of the buildings is in “dire condition” mostly because of a leaking roof, the inspector wrote.
“Water infiltration is so prevalent throughout most of the classrooms there is standing water, both on the floor and in the light fixtures in the ceiling,” according to the inspection report. “Carpets in many of the classrooms are soaking wet, and tiles in specific communal areas are peeling. The majority of the acoustical ceiling tiles have been removed or fallen to the floor. Mold is visibly evident throughout many of the classrooms.”
The other building is in “fair” condition, he wrote, recommending cosmetic changes and accessibility upgrades.
Additionally, asbestos material was found in some of the flooring and it had to be removed and replaced.
The roof also had to be fixed, records show.
“Concept Schools, which our board had approved, has been unable to secure a safe and viable facility for the Clay Evans campus and so we will not be allowing the school to open for very obvious reasons — there’s no facility,” Byrd-Bennett said Thursday.
“We thought we could make the necessary investments,” Concept Vice President Salim Ucan said Friday.
The charter school planned to open in September and use just one of the buildings while work was finished by October, records show.
Now Ucan said the focus is finding schools for more than 400 enrolled children and 40 teachers and administrators hired to staff the Clay Evans campus.
“We are working with the area charter schools to see if they have openings for the respective grades,” he said. “We are trying to see if we can transfer them to our existing schools.”
Concept, whose Des Plaines headquarters were raided by the FBI in June, lost out on its first facility, a building owned by an arm of a church headed by the Rev. Charles Jenkins.
It then proposed the former school building location, which is being foreclosed on by Urban Partnership Bank. David Vitale, the president of the Chicago Board of Education, is chairman of that bank.
http://politics.suntimes.com/article/chicago/cps-scraps-south-side-campus-controversial-charter-school/thu-08212014-1004am
CPS scraps South Side campus for controversial charter school Thu, 08/21/2014 - 10:04am
By: Becky Schlikerman
Chantay Moore had shed tears of joy, relieved to have a new charter school open near her South Side home.
But on Thursday, Moore was anything but happy when she learned the charter school operated by beleaguered Concept Schools won’t be allowed to open next month near Chatham.
The building that was to house Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy-Clay Evans will not be ready for the first day of school, CPS CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett said Thursday.
“Concept Schools, which our board had approved, has been unable to secure a safe and viable facility for the Clay Evans campus and so we will not be allowing the school to open for very obvious reasons — there’s no facility,” Byrd-Bennett said.
The decision — first reported by Early & Often — was made after Concept, whose Des Plaines headquarters were raided by the FBI in June, lost out on its first facility, a building owned by an arm of a church headed by the Rev. Charles Jenkins.
The second facility chosen for the school at 9130 S. Vincennes needs to be renovated and won’t be ready next month, Byrd-Bennett said. At this point, a lease for the former private school building has not yet been signed, said Jack Elsey, who heads the department that oversees charters for CPS.
Concept Schools officials, in an emailed statement, said they have gone to “great lengths to prepare this location for families in the Chatham community.”
“Though our original site plans changed, we quickly identified this location and moved forward with numerous structural, security and safety upgrades at the school to ensure a successful start to the school year,” the statement said. “We share the same disappointment our parents have expressed with the decision made by CPS. We are even more disappointed that this decision impacts students and families just days before the school year begins.”
The FBI investigation, which federal documents show is focused on many of the politically connected charter-school operator’s top administrators and companies with close ties to it, had nothing to do with the district’s decision to scratch the school, Byrd-Bennett said. Concept’s charter has not been revoked and the South Side school has simply been “delayed” for likely a year, she said. No other Concept campuses are affected by CPS’ decision to scratch the Clay Evans campus.
But local Ald. Howard Brookins (21st) said the federal investigation “clearly had to weigh into” it.
“It’s a combination of everything. The plug was pulled from Pastor Jenkins’ location because of the investigation and I don’t know that they ever had enough time to recover and find another location that would be suitable,” Brookins said.
Concept Vice President Salim Ucan said earlier this week that Jenkins’ location was scrapped because Concept couldn’t finish the renovations in time for school.
The second location, on Vincennes, generated controversy after the Sun-Times reported earlier this month that David Vitale, the president of the Chicago Board of Education, runs a bank that would have benefitted if Concept had opened the school in that building.
Vitale is chairman of Urban Partnership Bank, which has filed suit to foreclose on the building. The building’s owners owe Vitale’s bank $2 million, court records show.
A CPS spokesman has said Vitale was not involved in the selection of the property.
Meanwhile, CPS staffers will notify the parents of the more than 400 kids enrolled in the school about the scrapped plan and will help parents find other school options, Byrd-Bennett said.
Brookins said he has been assured that the displaced students will be offered the chance to return to their original public schools. If that’s not acceptable, CPS will work with families to find an acceptable alternative, he said. “There were concerns that Concept didn’t have their act together going forward. It’s best that CPS get out ahead of it if they weren’t going to be ready and assist those kids to get into a school of their choice so they can start on the first day of school and have no interruption, he said.
On Thursday afternoon, Moore said she had not yet heard from the district.
She said she spent the last year trying to find an alternative to the private school her 5-year-old daughter had been attending.
“I can’t afford the tuition any longer,” said Moore, 30. “To have this option taken away again, what am I to do?”
Avalon Collier, who was hoping to send her 8-year-old grandson to the Clay Evans campus, said she’ll try to get him enrolled into CICS Longwood, the charter school he attended last year, though the commute is inconvenient and that school has already started its year.
“It’s horrible,” the 65-year-old grandmother said when she learned the Concept School won’t open. “I’m going to call his school to see if they’ll take him back. If not, I won’t have another alternative but to put him back in the neighborhood school. I would hate to do that; he did so well in the other school.”
Concept, which also plans to open a new charter in Gage Park for the coming school year, operates three other charter schools in Chicago that serve about 1,275 students. As with other charter schools in Chicago, they are funded with CPS tax funds.
Likewise, Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy-Clay Evans site will not open as scheduled simply because there is no building to open. According to an article printed in the Chicago Sun Times, and per Concept’s President, Salim Ucan, Concept Schools’ Jenkins location could not house students because the scheduled renovations could not be completed before the start of the school year.
So that leaves a lot of angry parents, 400 befuddled students, and 40 staff personnel wondering exactly where they will land in this “holy crap – what do we now?” educational limbo created by Concept Schools.
It would seem that with the amount of money the Gulenists collect from our tax coffers, that at the very least they could find something other than a toxic dump site to use for their school location. Perhaps their greedy aspirations and race to circumvent the public education system in order to further their personal agenda has fostered an ambivalent and non-compliant attitude towards student safety.
Students and parents have enough to contend with, especially those struggling with familial poverty -- and at the very least – deserve to have their children educated in a wholesome, safe, and secure learning environment that lest we not forget -- is ultimately funded by the American tax payers.
Below are two articles about the Chicago Concept’s ghost schools written by Becky Schlikerman of the Chicago Sun Times:
http://politics.suntimes.com/article/chicago/leaky-roof-mold-asbestos-found-concept-schools%E2%80%99-chatham-site/sun-08242014-823pm
Leaky roof, mold, asbestos found at Concept Schools’ Chatham site Sun, 08/24/2014 - 8:23pm
By: Becky Schlikerman
Standing water from a leaky roof.
Visible mold and a pungent smell that hangs in the air.
Floor tiles made of asbestos.
Those were just some of the problems Concept Schools had to contend with before getting a school building near Chatham ready for kids next month after scrambling to find a new location this summer, according to documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.
Chicago Public Schools CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett last week announced she’s not letting the school open because the South Side building, which once housed a private school, won’t be ready for students next month.
“Mold is visibly evident throughout many of the classrooms. The mold and mildew is so bad, that a handful of the classrooms cannot be accessed due to the noxious, overwhelming, suffocating scent,” an inspector wrote for CPS officials in July.
The property that was to house Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy-Clay Evans is made up of two buildings. One of the buildings is in “dire condition” mostly because of a leaking roof, the inspector wrote.
“Water infiltration is so prevalent throughout most of the classrooms there is standing water, both on the floor and in the light fixtures in the ceiling,” according to the inspection report. “Carpets in many of the classrooms are soaking wet, and tiles in specific communal areas are peeling. The majority of the acoustical ceiling tiles have been removed or fallen to the floor. Mold is visibly evident throughout many of the classrooms.”
The other building is in “fair” condition, he wrote, recommending cosmetic changes and accessibility upgrades.
Additionally, asbestos material was found in some of the flooring and it had to be removed and replaced.
The roof also had to be fixed, records show.
“Concept Schools, which our board had approved, has been unable to secure a safe and viable facility for the Clay Evans campus and so we will not be allowing the school to open for very obvious reasons — there’s no facility,” Byrd-Bennett said Thursday.
“We thought we could make the necessary investments,” Concept Vice President Salim Ucan said Friday.
The charter school planned to open in September and use just one of the buildings while work was finished by October, records show.
Now Ucan said the focus is finding schools for more than 400 enrolled children and 40 teachers and administrators hired to staff the Clay Evans campus.
“We are working with the area charter schools to see if they have openings for the respective grades,” he said. “We are trying to see if we can transfer them to our existing schools.”
Concept, whose Des Plaines headquarters were raided by the FBI in June, lost out on its first facility, a building owned by an arm of a church headed by the Rev. Charles Jenkins.
It then proposed the former school building location, which is being foreclosed on by Urban Partnership Bank. David Vitale, the president of the Chicago Board of Education, is chairman of that bank.
http://politics.suntimes.com/article/chicago/cps-scraps-south-side-campus-controversial-charter-school/thu-08212014-1004am
CPS scraps South Side campus for controversial charter school Thu, 08/21/2014 - 10:04am
By: Becky Schlikerman
Chantay Moore had shed tears of joy, relieved to have a new charter school open near her South Side home.
But on Thursday, Moore was anything but happy when she learned the charter school operated by beleaguered Concept Schools won’t be allowed to open next month near Chatham.
The building that was to house Concept Schools’ Horizon Science Academy-Clay Evans will not be ready for the first day of school, CPS CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett said Thursday.
“Concept Schools, which our board had approved, has been unable to secure a safe and viable facility for the Clay Evans campus and so we will not be allowing the school to open for very obvious reasons — there’s no facility,” Byrd-Bennett said.
The decision — first reported by Early & Often — was made after Concept, whose Des Plaines headquarters were raided by the FBI in June, lost out on its first facility, a building owned by an arm of a church headed by the Rev. Charles Jenkins.
The second facility chosen for the school at 9130 S. Vincennes needs to be renovated and won’t be ready next month, Byrd-Bennett said. At this point, a lease for the former private school building has not yet been signed, said Jack Elsey, who heads the department that oversees charters for CPS.
Concept Schools officials, in an emailed statement, said they have gone to “great lengths to prepare this location for families in the Chatham community.”
“Though our original site plans changed, we quickly identified this location and moved forward with numerous structural, security and safety upgrades at the school to ensure a successful start to the school year,” the statement said. “We share the same disappointment our parents have expressed with the decision made by CPS. We are even more disappointed that this decision impacts students and families just days before the school year begins.”
The FBI investigation, which federal documents show is focused on many of the politically connected charter-school operator’s top administrators and companies with close ties to it, had nothing to do with the district’s decision to scratch the school, Byrd-Bennett said. Concept’s charter has not been revoked and the South Side school has simply been “delayed” for likely a year, she said. No other Concept campuses are affected by CPS’ decision to scratch the Clay Evans campus.
But local Ald. Howard Brookins (21st) said the federal investigation “clearly had to weigh into” it.
“It’s a combination of everything. The plug was pulled from Pastor Jenkins’ location because of the investigation and I don’t know that they ever had enough time to recover and find another location that would be suitable,” Brookins said.
Concept Vice President Salim Ucan said earlier this week that Jenkins’ location was scrapped because Concept couldn’t finish the renovations in time for school.
The second location, on Vincennes, generated controversy after the Sun-Times reported earlier this month that David Vitale, the president of the Chicago Board of Education, runs a bank that would have benefitted if Concept had opened the school in that building.
Vitale is chairman of Urban Partnership Bank, which has filed suit to foreclose on the building. The building’s owners owe Vitale’s bank $2 million, court records show.
A CPS spokesman has said Vitale was not involved in the selection of the property.
Meanwhile, CPS staffers will notify the parents of the more than 400 kids enrolled in the school about the scrapped plan and will help parents find other school options, Byrd-Bennett said.
Brookins said he has been assured that the displaced students will be offered the chance to return to their original public schools. If that’s not acceptable, CPS will work with families to find an acceptable alternative, he said. “There were concerns that Concept didn’t have their act together going forward. It’s best that CPS get out ahead of it if they weren’t going to be ready and assist those kids to get into a school of their choice so they can start on the first day of school and have no interruption, he said.
On Thursday afternoon, Moore said she had not yet heard from the district.
She said she spent the last year trying to find an alternative to the private school her 5-year-old daughter had been attending.
“I can’t afford the tuition any longer,” said Moore, 30. “To have this option taken away again, what am I to do?”
Avalon Collier, who was hoping to send her 8-year-old grandson to the Clay Evans campus, said she’ll try to get him enrolled into CICS Longwood, the charter school he attended last year, though the commute is inconvenient and that school has already started its year.
“It’s horrible,” the 65-year-old grandmother said when she learned the Concept School won’t open. “I’m going to call his school to see if they’ll take him back. If not, I won’t have another alternative but to put him back in the neighborhood school. I would hate to do that; he did so well in the other school.”
Concept, which also plans to open a new charter in Gage Park for the coming school year, operates three other charter schools in Chicago that serve about 1,275 students. As with other charter schools in Chicago, they are funded with CPS tax funds.