To boost parental involvement, the district converts elementaries that are not magnets into "community model schools," requiring parents to select a school.
February
The
three parties in the desegregation case—the district, state
and NAACP—agree to ask Judge Battisti to end federal oversight
of schools on July 1, 1997.
The board puts a 12.9-mill operating levy on the May ballot because the proposed deseg settlement requires passage of an operating levy. The board also schedules a capital improvement levy to fund repairs of deteriorated buildings.
March
Based
on reforms outlined in Vision 21, Judge Battisti gives preliminary
approval to ending federal court supervision; passage of
the levy will be critical.
A student is fatally shot outside Charles A. Mooney Middle School. Supt Parrish promises a crackdown on violence.
May
The
levy fails. Supt. Parrish proposes budget cuts, including
300 teachers, teacher’s aides, security guards and psychologists.
Up to $31 million may be borrowed from the state.
Judge Battisti agrees to free Cleveland schools from court supervision effective July 1, 1997, based on acceptance of the Vision 21 reform plan. The plan begins to unravel in the coming months when levies fail, and parties in the deseg suit bicker for months over easing restrictions on racial guidelines at 20 schools.
July
Judge
Battisti blocks school layoffs, stating that they would
prevent the district from meeting the terms of the deseg
settlement. Still, the board lays off 500 employees.
As part of the deseg settelment, the district opens a Community Relations Department and spends $300,000 to help parents choose schools.
September
As
many as 2,000 students may face reassignments to other schools
to achieve racial balance guidelines in 20 schools. Schools
eventually fix imbalance with voluntary transfers.
Federal supervision requires a facilities use plan by next
February and a capital improvements levy on the ballot in 1995.
October
Concerns
about violence in schools escalate. The board appoints a
task force.
November
Senior
Circuit Judge Robert B. Krupansky begins oversight of the
desegregation case following the October death of Judge
Battisti.
A levy is defeated for the second time this year, prompting $16 million more in budget cuts and delaying school reform programs.
Sources: The Plain Dealer, proceedings of Cleveland School Board meetings, school district annual reports.
Photos: Cleveland Municipal School District, U.S. District Court, Cleveland City Council