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  1. #1

    Default New vision for Chandler Park: Coalition plans charter school, recreation center

    By Sherri Welch

    After an unsuccessful campaign to revive plans for the $50 million Kroc community center on Detroit's east side, a coalition of community groups and businesses is launching a new plan for the Chandler Park site.

    The Chandler Park Promise Coalition, a 20-member group that includes many members of the former Save Our Kroc Center Coalition, plans a $30 million to $35 million charter school and recreational complex to take the place of the previously planned 100,000-square-foot Kroc center, a project of the Salvation Army Eastern Michigan Division.

    Many coalition members tried to revive the Kroc center project for nine months before deciding to move in a new direction.

    "There are people who were involved in the Salvation Army campaign who are starting to come back to the table," said Maggie DeSantis, president of the Warren/Conner Development Coalition, which is leading the effort.

    "We made a decision to replace what the Salvation Army had promised."

    The result is a more realistic and affordable plan with a charter school anchoring it, a large coalition of organizations working on the project and ample time for planning and fundraising, DeSantis said.

    "We think over time we can pull this off. ... Once the school is there, it will make the job of doing phase two more realistic."

    The Salvation Army's central territory headquarters pulled a $50 million grant from the estate of Joan Kroc from the Eastern Michigan Division two years ago after the division failed to secure a lead gift in its campaign to raise matching funds of $48 million for the center and spent the majority of its budget for the project campaign.

    At the time, the Salvation Army said it planned to build a $6 million, 20,000 to 30,000-square-foot center in lieu of the Kroc center, and it remains committed to building a new service center there, Maj. John Turner, general secretary of the Eastern Michigan Division, said in a statement emailed to Crain's last week.

    "To ensure that the appropriate location is selected, we are currently working in collaboration with the city of Detroit to identify the most appropriate site based on overall need and the city's changing population trends," he said.

    The Salvation Army declined to comment on the Chandler Park plans.

    Continued at: http://www.crainsdetroit.com/article...charter-school

    [[Google "New vision for Chandler Park: Coalition plans charter school, recreation center" and click the first link to view the full article)

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Posts
    5,067

    Default

    Why are there new charter schools being built all over the place when there are so many empty schools in the city and region?

  3. #3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Bham1982 View Post
    Why are there new charter schools being built all over the place when there are so many empty schools in the city and region?
    Silly question. Its because there are 140,000 less school age children living in the region since 2000. Why thats the size of Livonia, Plymouth, Plymouth Township and Northville.

    Can you see the need!?!

    Actually the combining of schools and community centers is an excellent idea. Too bad that the schools and cities operate indpendantly. Building new when we have so many classrooms already on the ground is questionable as well, particularly when the per pupil expenditures are being cut at the state level.

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