Saturday, January 9, 2010

EVCS wants to grow


Elmwood Village CS is a public charter school educating 175 children in grades K-6 in the city of Buffalo.  We've worked hard to make our school safe and friendly, high-performing, a good partner and member of the community and from what we hear from our families and our neighbors, we've succeeded spectacularly.  Our test scores also help us to know that our programs are working with a diverse population of kids.    Our families want us to expand through 8th grade, as middle school options are limited in Buffalo and it is a difficult year to transition these students.  There aren't many openings in 7th grades throughout the city and there aren't many good options for our graduating 6th graders.  

Since 7th through 12th grades are more expensive to run than K-6th (more subject specialization and therefore more specialized teacher certifications) the idea of adding a second classroom at each grade level was explored.  Many of the founders had wanted this from the beginning for academic reasons (grade-level collaboration, additional classroom arrangement options) but the founders eventually agreed that the school should build its programs on a small scale to ensure their success.

Now that the school has established its core programs and has had proven successes (we're one of the top public schools in Buffalo, and one that you don't have to test into) we want to broaden the population we serve and offer an excellent free public education to more children in Buffalo.  We can also broaden our fiscal foundation.  We want to insulate ourselves from the ups and downs of the economic and political landscapes. 

We were approached by parents and neighbors about the possibility of acquiring and moving into School 36 on Days Park.  It had been saved from closing for two years due to the efforts of members of the neighborhood.  The school district finally decided to follow through with the plan to merge the bi-lingual elementary population housed there with that at the newly renovated Herman Badillo School on Elmwood, leaving the building empty.  

EVCS entered into an exhaustive process of community meetings, appraisals, engineer and environmental inspections, meetings with the city real estate, legal and common council members, bankers and developers.  We put together financial projections and submitted an offer.

Unfortunately a wide gap exists between two appraisals that were done for the property and the city real estate department and the Appraisal Review Board (ARB) has arbitrarily settled on a price in-between the two values, despite the preponderance of evidence supporting the lower figure and the testimony of two well-respected appraisers at the ARB meeting.

We need to show community support and so we're collecting comments -- of course all comments can be submitted -- but we're hoping that the community recognizes how our expansion into School 36 will be good not only for EVCS, but also Days Park, Allentown, as well as the entire city of Buffalo.  Not only will we be using a public school building for its intended purpose, and offering an excellent and safe education to (eventually) 450 kids, but we'll be adding jobs and helping to stabilize the neighborhood.  We intend on being good neighbors and partners in the community, as we have shown ourselves to be at our current site at 124 Elmwood.

Thanks for your comments and we look forward to hearing from you!

Liz Evans
Founder, Board President and Parent
EVCS

Friday, January 8, 2010

Welcome

Hello and welcome to all.

If you don't already know us, Elmwood Village Charter School is a public charter school in Buffalo New York, serving 175 children in grades K-6. EVCS was founded by 6 individuals in Buffalo who care about education and want to make Buffalo better, stronger and more sustainable. We've got great kids, families, teachers, staff and board members and we're working every day to make ourselves and our community better.

Please don't hesitate to let us know your thoughts.