When Roy Roberts became the emergency manager of Detroit Public Schools (now Detroit Public Schools Community District, or DPSCD), he took on the nearly impossible challenge of turning around a system that wasn’t doing justice to the nearly 70,000 students currently enrolled in the district at the time. However, instead of shying away from the challenge, Roberts took the proverbial bull by the horns and embarked on a major shake-up that was slated to occur during the following school year. While some applauded Roberts’ efforts, others were concerned about what the changes would mean to students, teachers, and the neighborhoods that many of these schools called home.
School Closures Just the Beginning
From overcrowding in Detroit Public School classrooms to facing bankruptcy, the challenges abounded for this Michigan school district. According to the Huffington Post, Roberts planned to close nine public schools and convert four more into charters in an effort to repair a broken system. This move was predicted to save Detroit Public Schools $7.5 million in annual operating costs, money that Roberts hoped to put toward educating children rather than maintaining empty classrooms.
"Rather than continue to support buildings that are far underutilized…we will consolidate,” Roberts was reported saying at Huffington Post. “We have been using an outdated educational model that we must discard,” Roberts added.
The Detroit Free Press reported that by that fall, Detroit Public Schools would be downsized to around 50,000 students, down from the nearly 70,000 then enrolled in the school district
