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Pandora

Pitchforks and Torches at HPC


by Paul C. Clark
Staff Writer
Pages 1 2 3
...continued from page 1

Hall said that, since 2006, Guilford County Schools has had a total net growth of 356 students, 186 of which were added at High Point Central. He said, "Exactly half of that growth came from High Point Central."

Hall told the school board members, "I'm going to make it real simple."

Real simple meant that High Point Central has 16 teachers with no classrooms who trundle large carts from room to room all day; that the cafeteria was pointless ("Do the math," he said. "There's no way to get those students through the cafeteria."); the library wouldn't hold even a full class of students; and High Point Central needed a massive overhaul to make it fit for human habitation.

"It's time that High Point Central become one of the haves," Hall said. "We are, we feel, one of the have-nots. We are not a proponent of the school at the airport. We would rather see that money spent on existing schools." Huge applause and cheering erupted throughout the auditorium.

Ah, that applause. It was like cool water on parched earth. Duncan doesn't usually allow the audience at school board meetings to clap, cheer or talk. Instead, he makes the citizens paying for the school system do the "school board waggle" – a perverse, spastic vertical hand-wave Duncan claims will save time at school board meetings and forums. It was in dramatic evidence at High Point Central – you've never seen it done right until you've seen it done in a packed high school auditorium – but even Duncan's schoolmarm chiding couldn't keep this crowd quiet.

Here's hoping that the next school board chairman drops that obscene restriction. A school board that tolerates two-hour staff presentations at its meetings has a lot of gall trying to prevent the public from engaging in 30 seconds of applause.

Not even Duncan's habitual civility can take the sting out of telling taxpayers, in essence, to sit down and shut up.

Retired High Point Central teacher and coach Andrea Cozart gave the school board a scalding description of the way Guilford County Schools has allowed the school to deteriorate since its glory days, her speech punctuated by a word that was on the lips of nearly every speaker: "deplorable." She capped off her speech with a rousing call for the school board to return the Tomlinson building, with its 12 classrooms, to High Point Central.

"You can relieve the floating teacher situation tonight if you restore Tomlinson building to High Point Central," she said. "That academy is not a High Point Central entity. It is a Guilford County entity that could be put anyplace."

One thing that enraged the High Point Central supporters more than anything else is that, anticipating the airport area high school project being shot down, the Guilford County Schools Facilities Department came up with a $76 million list of upgrade and maintenance projects for schools – and High Point Central, which has more maintenance and space problems than most, is not on the list.

Cozart said she had seen a separate maintenance priority list for High Point Central, which was nonsensical.

"You have paving the parking lot as the number one priority," she said. "That is absolutely incredible."

Several High Point Central students spoke eloquently about the condition of the school – even though they will have long graduated by the time it is remedied.

High Point Central Student Body President Thomas Jarrell said, with admirable understatement, that students at the school have become used to conditions that are "less than ideal."

Jarrell said there are no doors on the boys' bathroom stalls. He said, "In fact, there are a few missing toilet seats on the toilets." He called the cafeteria "a serious problem that needs to be addressed," and said that classrooms are crowded and textbooks in incredibly short supply. "I've only been given one textbook this year in my eight classes," he said.

Jarrell said, "I urge you to use the funds to upgrade our schools."

A repeated complaint from parents was that the High Point Central cafeteria leaves poor students stuck on campus with no lunch – 60 percent of the school's students qualify for free or reduced-price lunches – and creates a dangerous situation daily as students with cars rush off campus to try to get lunch. Some parents said their children call them to come home for lunch, or even to use the bathroom.

One mother of a High Point Central student said her son had been in an accident only three weeks before. She said he was hit by a trash truck while rushing off campus for lunch.

The list of speakers was long, and the list of horror stories longer. Enough said.

The school board members, who saved their comments for the end of the forum, varied in their responses, but the overall tone was of a school board backing away from the airport area high school project so quickly it was in more danger of an accident than a hungry Central student.

The school board members tripped over themselves to deplore the deplorably deplorable conditions at High Point Central, which most claimed never to have noticed. The school board has a massive, 1,424 student high school, occupying a large property in the middle of High Point, and whose enrollment is projected to increase to 1,641 by 2,021 – but it had apparently never noticed it before.

Belton said it was disturbing "to hear these reports" – as if High Point were Mars, and the news of the maintenance problems had just been relayed from a NASA Mars lander.

Foster said her husband, Otis, is a High Point Central graduate who bleeds blue blood – the school's color.

"We are committed to doing better at High Point Central," she said. "These conditions are unacceptable and deplorable. I will not support building another school without addressing the needs of High Point Central."

Scratch one vote for the airport area high school.

Alexander said a previous school board voted for the airport area high school, and that the school board members could have simply accepted the vote of that school board, but that a few heroic school board members had implored Duncan to take the issue back to the people.

"That's what we've one here tonight," Alexander said. "We have heard you loud and clear ... we will not let you down."

Alexander's statement was laughable on so many levels that it was hard to know when to start laughing.

The school board pursued the imaginary Taj Mahal airport area high school with relentless idiocy for four years, backed off the plan only after forced to by a lack of land, and was forced to go back to "the people" after four years only because the airport area high school plan had collapsed utterly and it suddenly wanted support for it – or else support from the public to pressure the Guilford County Board of Commissioners to sell the school bonds intended for the proposed school to use elsewhere.

Alexander and most of the members of the school board were ignorant of the disasters along the way until they were reported in closed session after the fact, or until they read about them. Duncan and a few cronies controlled the entire building program, and the other school board members closed their eyes and rubber-stamped it heedlessly until forced to deal with the results of their lack of oversight.

...continued on page 3
Pages 1 2 3

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Tags: Guilford County Schools

  1. print email
    NW High
    December 10, 2012 | 02:38 PM

    I understand the plight of HPC, however they are not the only over crowded school. NW High consistently is in the top two list in test scores, SAT, college scholarships, etc. At the same time the front of the school is barely visible behind the trailer park of mobile classrooms.

    Richard Sumner
  2. print email
    HP Central
    December 12, 2012 | 08:59 AM

    If the district lines stay the way they are, my son will be a Freshman in 2018 at HP Central. I am afraid of what that school may be like by then.

    I would like to suggest that there are ZERO upgrades or maintenance items taken care of at the District offices until our SCHOOLS are brought up to date.

    That of course will never happen...

    Wally the Engineer
  3. print email
    Wally's World
    December 13, 2012 | 06:54 AM

    Wally is right on HP Central; the big wheels come first, teachers second and students dead last.
    Having kin retired from GCS central office, we have too many folks making too much money trying to justify their way too underworked jobs.

    Observer
  4. print email
    HPC BISON
    December 18, 2012 | 04:49 AM

    School Board: Message from the army: Get your head out of the sand!!

    Roger
  5. print email
    High Point Central Conditions
    December 19, 2012 | 08:55 AM

    Our daughters graduated from HPC and some of their friends now teach there. How in the world they manage to teach anything in these deplorable conditions is to be commended. Please keep up the pressure on the school board and the country commissioners. DO NOT LET HIGH POINT continue to be the Red Headed Stepchild of Guilford County.

    Red Headed Stepchild
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