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Cleveland School District: Bullying allegations, no air conditioning

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Bullying allegations, no air conditioning: Why parents are frustrated with the Cleveland School District

CLEVELAND — On the first day of school this year, seven of the eight school buildings in the district here didn't have working conditioning, leading multiple classes to be conducted simultaneously in the auditorium as parts of the building reached temperatures in the 80s.

The recent problems have driven the community frustration in Cleveland into overdrive. Parents have been expressing their discontent with the school conditions and leadership for multiple years, a rift that parents say has grown since the consolidation of the district's majority Black schools and historically white schools in 2017. 

Mississippi Today spoke to nearly a dozen parents and former employees who say this failure is the latest in a series of problems created by mismanagement and lack of communication. 

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The district's superintendent says he's aware of the community's complaints, but many of the problems are bigger than he alone can fix, and also questions whether others' issues are racially motivated.

At a community meeting on Aug. 25, Superintendent Otha Belcher fielded questions from a heated crowd. Parents pressed him for to the district's infrastructure woes and ways to address the declining enrollment, problems Belcher said his team is actively working to address. Parents repeatedly said that they wanted “less and more action.” 

At the community meeting, Belcher said HVAC renovations have been on the books for months in the district's plans to spend pandemic relief funds, but have been generally delayed by supply issues and became more urgent when several units quit completely. Portable units are currently in place in every classroom without air, according to Belcher. 

“It's so embarrassing and it's just such a stain on our town and community that we can't even take an entire summer … to get this figured out and get in our buildings with air conditioning and food,” said Todd Davis, president of the Bell Academy Booster Club. 

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The air conditioning issues have also compounded problems for meals served by the schools. Child Nutrition Director Shenika Newsom said at the meeting that when the high school's kitchen was without air conditioning they drove meals over in vans for a few days from the middle school, but regular cafeteria service has since resumed. She said supply chain issues will continue to cause meal substitutions and changes to menus. 

“This is not something we want to do, but something we have to do,” she said. 

Steven Chudy, a parent at the community meeting, called the HVAC renovations a waste of taxpayer dollars and them to “putting lipstick on a pig,” instead saying that the district should be focusing its efforts on building new facilities. 

“I'm getting blamed for something that happened 40 years ago,” Belcher told Mississippi Today, referencing the district's long-running infrastructures woes. “Do we need new buildings? In my opinion that's the largest issue, everyone wants new buildings, but that takes a lot of money.” 

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Belcher said that while he agrees infrastructure is an issue, these problems exist across the Delta as the area sees population decline. 

“If people are leaving, that means children are leaving,” he said. “It's not just aimed at the Cleveland School District, it's everywhere.” 

While enrollment numbers are not yet available for the new school year, the Cleveland School District has seen a relatively steady decline in enrollment over the last 10 years according to data from the Mississippi Department of Education. The annual decline of about 3% is steeper than the statewide average but similar to other school districts in the Delta. 

The percent of teachers leaving the district was 11% higher than the average, reaching 28% at the end of the 2020-21 school year. This was an increase from prior years when the percent of teachers leaving the district hovered between 20-24%. 

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Multiple parents have questioned Belcher's leadership in the district more broadly, an accusation that he says is racially motivated. 

Cleveland School District Superintendent Otha Belcher (left) greets Pearman Elementary fifth grade students on their first day back to class Monday, August 9, 2021.

“I have been called so many racial names, I've had three cars vandalized, I've had all these phone calls, people delivering things to my house, and I don't ever say a word,” he said. “There is a lot going about racial stuff but I keep pushing through it because it's not about me, it's about the kids.” 

He added that no matter who serves in his position, he does not believe the community will see the change they are looking for without first coming together. 

Jennifer Adams Williams moved to Cleveland because her husband's is native to the area and said the district is “unlike anything she has ever seen.” 

Her older daughter, a student at Cleveland Central High School, had been a part of the STAR program, an academic enrichment program, in elementary and middle school but was disappointed to discover a lack of advanced classes at the high school to continue to be challenged. Williams also expressed frustration with the district for discontinuing the STAR program altogether. 

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“To hear that they've taken it away, it's like you're working against your own self-interest,” she said. 

She took issue with the building conditions and meal issues as well, saying they would have already moved if not for her husband's family and her daughter's desire to graduate with her friends.

“We're really to get things together because my hope is that our younger children don't have to deal with what I've seen these children go through,” Williams said. 

Additional parents echoed this sentiment, saying their children have enjoyed the community at the high school but are concerned that they are not getting what they need to be adequately prepared for college. 

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Christie Coker Tolbert said her major issue with the district was the unaddressed bullying.

“There's supposed to be this huge no bullying, zero tolerance, but it seemed like if not every day then every other day (my daughter) was getting threats on her life,” Tolbert said. 

She said she was unhappy with the way the district handled the bullying incidents and how they notified her about it. Her daughter, now in third grade, has since left the district for private school.

Other parents told Mississippi Today they are dissatisfied with the care provided for their special needs children, both in terms of classroom instruction and handling of bullying. They raised concerns about what they say is a lack of communication from administrators and verbal bullying by students and teachers, to the point that their children were hiding from teachers in the building or didn't know their teacher's name to ask for help. 

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Belcher said that there had not previously been a procedure to handle bullying before he arrived in the district, but that he felt the principals had successfully implemented the policy that was developed. When pressed about bullying against special needs students specifically, Belcher said he was not aware of any issues. 

 “We haven't heard any of that,” he said. “Usually if there's a complaint of that nature and the district hasn't handled it, it goes directly to (the Mississippi Department of Education) because that parent will go to MDE quick. But I haven't been informed of anyone that's complaining. Again, if you know some names please give them to me so that we can contact them.” 

LaDonne Sterling, a parent in attendance at the community meeting, said she thinks pressure should be focused on the school board rather than the superintendent, but he should be working to make himself more visible in the community. 

“I think that he's trying because I work in a district where the air conditioning is out,” she said. “Everybody is short staffed … Overall I wouldn't know where to take my kids because things are everywhere.”

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi News

Mississippi Senate sends Medicaid expansion counteroffer to House

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www.wjtv.com – Richard Lake – 2024-04-26 11:52:46

SUMMARY: Mississippi Senate expansion conferees offered the House two counteroffers. One was the original Medicaid “lite” plan from the Senate, and the other was a compromise without a work requirement. Both plans up to 138% of the federal poverty level, with the paying 10% of insurance costs. State Senator Kevin Blackwell stated that the Senate's hybrid plan aligns with the House's request to cover individuals up to 138% of the poverty level. The House can choose to accept, amend, or decline both offers.

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Mississippi News

Mississippi sees first documented cicada of 2024

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www.wjtv.com – Kristopher White – 2024-04-26 10:57:22

SUMMARY: Cicadas are emerging in Mississippi, with Choctaw County witnessing its first documented cicada for 2024. Mississippi has three broods of 13-year cicadas, with Brood XIX set to emerge this year. Mississippi is the only with all three broods of 13-year periodic cicadas, with Brood XIX in 2024, Brood XXII in 2027, and Brood XXIII in 2028. There are 12 broods of 17-year cicadas, but these occur farther north. Periodic cicadas are known for their appearance, loud singing, and large numbers. Mississippi will also see annual cicadas with greenish bodies and bulging eyes.

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Mississippi News

Lions Club members help Monroe Strong with rebuilding Amory

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www.wcbi.com – Eric Lampkin – 2024-04-26 10:29:23

SUMMARY: Monroe Strong in Amory, Mississippi is working to bring the town back by repairing roofs of homes damaged by a last year. They received a $100,000 donation from Lions Club International Foundation to their efforts. Monroe Strong has formed local partnerships to stretch the grant money and get the work done quickly. They have already replaced roofs of four homes and aim to complete around 20 in total. like Alice Freeman are grateful for the , calling it a blessing. The organization is making progress in their mission to rebuild Amory one house at a time.

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The post Lions Club members help Monroe Strong with rebuilding Amory appeared first on www.wcbi.com

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