K1 SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 OPINION + ANALYSIS + DEBATE Help 20,000 adults change their lives T Ambitious goal aims to bolster our workforce Earlier this year, James Samuel — who had never learned to read and write — sent his wife a love letter. “Edwina, you are my best friend and my lover. I love you. Love, James” It was a big accomplishment for the 55-year-old Highland Park man, who earlier this year joined a literacy program at the FROM THE DETROIT NEWS: For Mahorn and mom, a cap is never too late READING WORKS Detroit Free Press 19A Nolan Finley: Toya Graham is mom of the year 26A 313-222-6583 letters@freepress.com By Frank Witsil WWW.FREEP.COM Parkman Branch of the Detroit Public Library, a Reading Works partner. It was his first letter, and something, he said, that he’d always wanted to do. He struggled to spell the words. But, he was determined — and he had help. Reading Works, an organization that aims to improve adult literacy in metro Detroit, has set an ambitious goal to enroll 20,000 adults, like Samuel, in litSee READING, Page 20A JESSICA J. TREVINO/DETROIT FREE PRESS James Samuel, 55, of Highland Park looks at the love letter he wrote to his wife. Samuel had gone his whole life without being able to read. With help from Reading Works, he has made great strides toward changing his life. EDITORIAL: TWO PLANS FOR DETROIT’S SCHOOLS What’s the answer? F he tassels hung from the top of her bedroom lamp. Four of them belonged to her children. One of them was hers. Alice Faye Mahorn dropped out of high school when she was 16 to give birth to a son. Three more children kept her from returning. But she vowed she would earn her diploma before any of her kids got theirs. And so this single mother in Hartford, Conn., cleaned houses to support her family and went to night school classes after making the kids dinner. She did this for years, whenever she could clear the time. And finally, true to her word, several months before her oldest son walked across a stage, she did it first, because she felt a MITCH ALBOM mother should set the example. “She wore her cap and gown,” Rick Mahorn recalls. “It was a big deal because education was so important for her.” Her tassel went on the lamp. Rick’s older brother’s followed, then his two sisters’ and finally his. One by one, they were hooked together where Alice could see them before falling asleep and upon waking up. But Rick had a chance to add one more — a college tassel, the first in his family. He came close. “I was recruited to Hampton Institute (in Virginia) for football and basketball,” he says. “I went for four years. Originally, I only went for the education, but when I got the chance to play in the NBA, I still had about 12 credits to go.” He left. And didn’t go back. A Bad Boy in the NBA or decades, we’ve asked, cajoled, begged, ordered and instructed the powers that be to fix Detroit’s schools. We’ve made arguments ranging from the pragmatic — the state can’t succeed without a functional Detroit, and Detroit can’t succeed without a functional school system — to the elegant altruistic: Detroit’s kids deserve better. Finally, two recently released plans describe longterm visions for Detroit’s public schools, one the product of the Coalition for the Future of Detroit Schoolchildren — a community, business and civic group — and one developed by Gov. Rick Snyder’s education team. Which plan charts the right course for Detroit’s schools and Detroit’s kids? Maybe neither. Maybe parts of both. We’ve tried to evaluate each plan in realistic terms and find the common ground between them. There are opportunities for collaboration and for improvement. Regardless, community members, local elected leaders and state officials must find a viable path forward. Of course, Mahorn did do some other things. He was a second-round draft choice of the Washington Bullets. Became a league celebrity as part of “McFilthy and McNasty” with Jeff Ruland (and later just as infamous with his Bruise Brother, Bill Laimbeer). And of course, as Pistons fans remember well, Mahorn won an NBA championship with Detroit’s Bad Boys team in 1989. His mother rooted him on. But deep down, she still wished he had graduated from college. She wanted that tassel on her lamp. “I’ll go back,” he told her. “You promise?” “Yes, Mom.” We all think our mothers will be there forever, and the things they harp on, they will harp on just as long. But in 1993, a few days before Christmas, Alice Mahorn suffered a massive heart attack and passed away at 57. Mourners at the Hartford church celebrated her spirit and generosity. Rick attended with some NBA colleagues (he was then with the New Jersey Nets) and among the accolades given his departed mother, he heard about her love of learning. “That was so important to her,” he says. “A single mom. We were on government assistance most of our childhood. She didn’t want any of us to have to rely on that. She insisted on education.” He instilled that idea in his own children, three of whom already have college degrees. But while Mahorn obviously did well enough as an NBA player, the idea that he hadn’t earned his diploma weighed on his mind. Then, four years ago, he saw a story about Earl Cureton, the former Piston, who went back to the University of Detroit Mercy to get his degree, and presented it to his 94-year-old mom. “To see the smile on his mother’s face that her baby boy got his degree,” says Mahorn, now 56. “I would have loved to have given my mother that feeling.” Governance A weekend trip to Virginia Where they’re different: The coalition’s and the governor’s plans lay out two distinctly different versions of Detroit’s schools: The coalition sees Detroit Public Schools, in its current format — including its elected board — as the way forward. The governor proposes a dramatic change, splitting the district into two entities, old and new districts. It’s not entirely clear how this would legally be accomplished, with regards to creating a new district, dividing the debt, accounting for pension liabilities, transferring DPS’ physical assets and negotiating or re-negotiating labor contracts. The key to Snyder’s plan is See EDITORIAL, Page 21A And so he made a call to his old school, now called Hampton University. He found out his status. And in between his duties as a Pistons broadcaster, he did online classes, first one, then another, working in hotel rooms, at home after dinner, quietly, the way his mother had done her own extra-hours studying. And today, wearing a gown that will admittedly use a lot more fabric than the average graduate (Mahorn is 6-feet-10) he will walk with the class of 2015 — a mere 35 years behind his original group — and be recognized as a Hampton graduate with a bachelor of arts degree. His family will be in attendance. And in many ways, so will his mother. Maybe not in a seat. But in everything it took to get there, and everything he will do that follows, because studying may stop, but teaching and learning never do. Alice Mahorn knew that. Her youngest son does, too. He plans to put the tassel once meant for her lamp on his own lamp instead. You know what’s already there? All the graduation tassels of his kids — her grandchildren. If there’s a better Mother’s Day present than that, I don’t know what it is. Contact Mitch Albom: malbom@freepress.com. 234577.pdf POINTS OF VIEW w 20A WWW.FREEP.COM SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 The Editorial Board Detroit Free Press A Gannett company 160 W. Fort Street Detroit, MI 48226 letters@freepress.com Free Press editorials reflect the consensus of our editorial board: 313-222-6659 shenderson600@freepress.com 313-223-4550 jgopwani@freepress.com 313-222-6545 daustin99@freepress.com 313-222-6584 bdickerson@freepress.com 313-223-4534 jhill@freepress.com 313-222-6585 nkaffer@freepress.com 313-222-6616 thompson@freepress.com Stephen Henderson Jewel Gopwani Dan Austin Brian Dickerson James G. Hill Nancy Kaffer Mike Thompson Free Press Executive Staff Robert Huschka, Managing Director Nancy Andrews, Chief of Innovation Julie Green Topping, Senior Director of Content Strategy Ashley C. Woods, Consumer Experience Director Paul Anger, Editor/Publisher Stephen Henderson, Managing Director/Opinion and Community Engagement Jewel Gopwani, Community Engagement Director READING: Program helping to change lives FROM PAGE 19A eracy programs by the end of 2020. The organization wants to increase its financial support to its nine partners teaching adults to read, something it considers essential to Detroit’s revival. “It is important for the wellbeing of our whole community to invest in adult literacy,” said Paula Brown, the executive director of Reading Works. “These are people who need good jobs so they can provide stable homes and security for their children.” For years, Samuel hid his illiteracy from family, friends and people he worked with. He lived in fear of what would happen if others knew. “Now,” he said, “I tell anybody who will listen: I can’t read, but I’m learning how.” The library made copies of Samuel’s two-sentence note to save, because more than an expression of love, it represents something he and millions of READING WORKS PARTNERS ACCESS-Youth and Education Anisa Sahoubah, director 2651 Saulino Court, Dearborn 313-842-6762 salarashi@telecommunications www.accesscommunity.org Adult literacy English classes for men and women Detroit Public Library Parkman Branch Annette Lotharp, reading and Literacy specialist 1766 Oakman Blvd., Detroit 313-481-1814 alotharp@detroitpubliclibrary.org www.detroit.lib.mi.us/branch/parkman Literacy classes and one-on-one tutoring to men and women Dominican Literacy Center Sister Janice Brown, director 5555 Connor, Ste. 1414, Detroit 313-267-1000 dlcliteracy@gmail.com www.dlcliteracy.org Adult Basic Education and GED preparatory courses for men and women. Focus: HOPE Alexis Hollins, manager, Fast Track 1355 Oakman Blvd., Detroit 313-494-5500 hollina@focushope.edu www.focushope.edu Skill enhancement courses to help students upgrade reading and math skills Macomb Literacy Partners Alisa Diez, interim director 16480 Hall Road, Clinton Township 586-286-2750 read@macombliteracy.org www.macombliteracy.org One-on-one reading tutoring for adults in Macomb County libraries. Mercy Education Project Amy Amador, executive director 1450 Howard St., Detroit 313-963-5881 aamador@mercyed.net www.mercyed.net Literacy classes for women and girls. St. Vincent and Sarah Fisher Center (SVSF Center) Diane Renaud, executive director/CEO 16800 Trinity St., Detroit 313-535-9200 diane.renaud@svsfcenter.org www.svsfcenter.org GED preparatory courses for men and women in northwest Detroit Siena Literacy Center Donna Nesbitt, Director 16888 Trinity St., Detroit 313-532-8404 info@sienaliteracy.org www.sienaliteracy.org One-on-one tutoring to Adult Basic Education students in northwest Detroit Southwest Solutions Tim McGorey, director, Adult Learning Labs 4214 W. Vernor Hwy. 313-451-8055 tmcgorey@swsol.org www.swsol.org English as a Second Language and GED classes to men and women in southwest Detroit other Michiganders who struggle to read and write are looking for: hope for a better life. Reading Works — through its efforts to seek donations and grants, recruit volunteers and tutors, and set standards and track the progress of participants — is giving adults in metro Detroit the skills to fill out employment forms, comprehend medicine labels and read bedtime stories to their kids. Scope of the problem Three days a week, Samuel works with a tutor and does lessons on an iPad. At home, he practices reading with “The Berenstain Bears” and the Bible. He studies a worn handbook, “What Every Driver Must Know,” so he can pass the written test to get a Michigan driver’s license, something he’s never had. “They always tell me if you read a book, your mind will start wandering into another world,” he said. “That’s what I want. I don’t even know what that world would feel like, but I would love to find out.” To understand the magnitude of illiteracy in Michigan, consider these numbers: ■ About 36 million adults have poor reading and writing skills in the U.S., according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, a Paris-based think tank. That’s nearly the population of California. ■ Nationally, according to one study, the rate of adults with low literacy is 1 in 6. In Michigan, it’s 1 in 3. And, in Detroit, experts say the problem is worse. ■ The single most significant predictor of children’s literacy is their mother’s literacy level, according to a U.S. Department of Education report. Reading Works was created because community leaders realized in 2011, after working with Detroit Public Schools’ Reading Corps program for children, that more needed to be done to address the problem of adult illiteracy, board chairman Paul Anger said. “The thing that makes Reading Works, and all the agencies that teach adults, so important is that it’s the forgotten piece,” said Anger, who is retiring this month as editor and publisher of the Free Press. “It’s really time we did something about that. That’s what Reading Works is trying to do.” Anger said he plans to continue working with the organization after he retires. “It’s really a passion of mine,” he said. “Journalists have a love of words and love HOW YOU CAN HELP Encourage people who need help reading to call United Way 2-1-1. They can connect with a Reading Works Impact Partner in their area. Volunteer! Our learners need you! Training and materials are provided. To find out more, go to www.readingworksdetroit.org or call United Way 2-1-1. Donate now. Your contributions will directly support programs and services across metro Detroit that are helping adults learn to read. Your gift of reading will help improve economic opportunities for individuals, health and household management for families and literacy outcomes for children. Thank you for supporting this critical mission to improve the outlook for our region through adult literacy. JESSICA J. TREVINO/DETROIT FREE PRESS James Samuel works on his reading with tutor Rosemarie Abate, 77, of Detroit. “They always tell me if you read a book, your mind will start wandering into another world,” he said. “That’s what I want. I don’t even know what that world would feel like, but I would love to find out.” to convey to the community what’s going on around them. All of us want to make the community better. This is something we believe in deeply.” Putting people to work Southwest Solutions, a nonprofit in southwest Detroit, joined Reading Works as a partner last year. “We’re preparing people to read English, speak English and preparing them to take the GED,” said Tim McGorey, the senior program manager. “What Reading Works has done is provide us with a wider network of adult education programs.” Many adults, McGorey said, are learning English as a second language and enroll in the program with limited reading skills — reading, at best, at the sixth-grade level. After about two years of classes, they are able to read at an 11thor 12th-grade level. But, reading, McGorey said, is just a starting point. “We’re trying to help people get more reading skills so they can get jobs and be more effective in their daily lives,” he added. “When you’re inundated with words, if you don’t understand what’s coming at you, you lost out. You don’t have the tools to survive — and thrive.” Adult literacy is a challenging problem to address, said Alisa Diez, executive director of Macomb Literacy in Clinton Township. It takes time — months and years — to learn to read and write, and every adult starts at a different level and has different needs. “No one ever says: ‘I can’t read,’ ” she said. “There’s a huge stigma around that. People are hiding.” But, she said, boosting literacy helps put people to work — and it changes lives. Diez recalled a father who joined the program who worked at a car wash and realized he couldn’t advance and make more money without better reading skills. He also had a son who needed prescription medicine. “The thought of giving it to him everyday without knowing how to read the instructions was so scary,” she said. ‘Your life will be better’ Annette Lotharp, a librarian and literacy specialist at the Detroit Public Library’s Parkman branch, said Reading Works adds a dimension of support and collaboration that they otherwise wouldn’t have. It ties the programs into a larger network, she said. Samuel said he started struggling with reading and writing in elementary school. His mother didn’t read well either. By the seventh grade, he dropped out. He said he got his first job by asking a cousin to fill out his application for him. After that, he’d ask someone to help him every time he needed to read something or fill out a form. He got a job doing laundry at the Detroit Medical Center. He worked there for 17 years. But, Samuel mostly concealed this inability, blaming reading troubles on bad eyesight. Once, he said, he needed to fill out a form, and broke his glasses so he’d have an excuse not to. Another time, he got lost taking a bus. He couldn’t read street signs. He wandered for miles, trying to find his way home. His step-daughter, he said, discovered his secret when she was 18. She asked him to drive her to Lansing, but noticed, when he needed directions, he was reading the map upside-down. He told his son he couldn’t read when the teen started using his cell phone to text him. The look his boy gave him, Samuel said, cut deep. One person who has known his secret is his wife, who has read for him for years. But, he wondered aloud, if anything happened to her — or if she left him — how he would care for himself? “It’d mean a lot to me if I could start reading, writing, spelling, and start doing it for myself,” Samuel said. “Don’t be scared to tell people you can’t. Just say: I can’t, and I’m going to do something about it. If you do, your life will be better. “My life is a whole lot better.” Contact Frank Witsil: 313-222-5022 or fwitsil@freepress.com The Giving Cutout Coupon Yes! I want to help create better futures for metro Detroit adults through reading. Enclosed is my check, payable to “Reading Works,” for $_______________________ or use my credit card information below. Send check to Reading Works, 645 Griswold, Ste. 2600, Detroit, MI 48226 You may also make your gift securely online and arrange for monthly donations at www.readingworksdetroit.org. All donations are fully tax-deductible. Name: _______________________________________________________________________________ Address: _____________________________________________________________________________ City: ___________________________________ State: _____________ Zip: __________________ Telephone: ______________________________ E-mail: ____________________________________ Please contact me about volunteering Please e-mail me newsletters and updates (Circle one) Visa Mastercard Card number: ________________________________________________________________________ Expiration date: _____________________ CSV: _____________ Name as it appears on the card: _______________________________________________________ Reading Works will not share your personal information or keep your credit card information on file once your gift is processed. If you have any questions, please call 313-962-6202. READING WORKS LEADERSHIP HONORARY CHAIRS ■ Judge Damon J. Keith ■ A. Alfred Taubman (posthumous) ■ Rochelle Riley OFFICERS ■ Paul Anger, chairman; editor & publisher, Detroit Free Press ■ Elizabeth W. Brooks, co-vice chairwoman; chairwoman, Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History ■ Cynthia J. Pasky, co-vice chairwoman; president and CEO, Strategic Staffing Solutions ■ Debora Scola, secretary; community affairs director, Michigan.com ■ Daniel F. Smith, treasurer; partner, Ernst & Young LLP DIRECTORS ■ Ismael Ahmed, University of Michigan/Dearborn ■ Michael Cheatham, Comerica Bank ■ Robert Cohen, Jewish Community Relations Council ■ Gary Dembs, Non-Profit Personnel Network ■ Ahmad M. Ezzeddine, Wayne State University ■ Eve Haley, Bosch Community Fund ■ Stephen Henderson, Detroit Free Press ■ Kendra L. Howard, Detroit Jobs Alliance ■ Joyce Jenereaux, Detroit Free Press and Michigan.com ■ Thomas Linn, Miller, Canfield, Paddock & Stone ■ Thomas G. McGinnis, Deloitte ■ Jonathan D. Parks, MIGEARUP, Wayne State University ■ Susie Schechter, philanthropic advisor ■ Tim Smith, Skidmore Studio ■ Chuck Stokes, WXYZ (Channel 7) ■ Bankole Thompson, Michigan Chronicle ■ Joni M. Thrower, McDonald’s dba/Jamojomar, Inc. ■ Donnell White, Detroit Branch NAACP STAFF ■ Paula Brown, executive director ■ Kristen Barnes-Holiday, director of program outcomes vPOINTS OF VIEW SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 WWW.FREEP.COM 21A Together, we can make giant steps in metro Detroit literacy By Paul Anger and Paula Brown You can feel the energy in metro Detroit that’s directed at improving schools, building more seamless public transportation, creating more and better jobs, making our city core vibrant. All are priorities, as they should be. But there’s an important thread often forgotten as we work to transform our comPaul munity: adult Anger literacy. We need more adults across the region with the skills to hold a good-paying Paula job, create a Brown learning culture for children in the home, and move on to higher education so they can get an even better job — but the amount of private and public money funneled to adult education has historically been a drop in the bucket of what’s needed. Fortunately, momentum on behalf of adult literacy is building. You can see it in the efforts of Reading Works, now in its fourth year as a nonprofit leading the charge across the community. You can see it in the backing of visionaries such as the late A. Alfred Taubman, Judge Damon J. Keith, Free Press columnist Rochelle Riley, philanthropist Richard Manoogian, business and community leaders Cindy Pasky and Joyce Jenereaux and civic leader Betty Brooks. You can see it in the significant support from organizations such as the DTE Energy Foundation, the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan, the Alex and Marie Manoogian Foundation, Quicken Loans and the Comerica Charitable Foundation. And you see it in the community goals set by Reading Works and the major adult literacy providers we work closely with: ACCESS, Dominican Literacy Center, Detroit Public Library-Parkman Branch Library, Focus: HOPE, Macomb Literacy Partners, Mercy Education Project, St. Vincent and Sarah Fisher Center, Siena Literacy Center and Southwest Solutions. By 2020, we aim to reach 20,000 adult learners enrolled in a structured, credible literacy program like the ones run by our current partners or others we will add in the coming years. And we won’t stop there. We’ll keep building on our efforts to solidify the work force and bolster a learning culture that gives schoolchildren the support they need in their homes. Right now, nearly 3,000 adults are enrolled with our literacy partners. That’s an increase from a little more than 2,000 learners when Reading Works formed in 2011. So there’s progress — and a long way to go. We can get there. Our literacy partners are outstanding, and they’re working together. They’ve been meeting monthly to share best practices, set priorities and address barriers to learners’ success. They have business plans on how they can expand, with more resources. They’re putting their data — tracking learner progress — into a common database provided by Reading Works. We’re at the point where we can make a great leap forward. It wasn’t always like this. Literacy providers had struggled as one-offs historically, competing with each other for crumbs of funding and having anecdotal success with some learners, but not really pulling together in a community effort on the scale needed. Now, we have that community effort. Through donor support, Reading Works has recently launched three pilot programs toward our collective goals of scaling up our efforts and accelerating progress among learners. The first pilot involves six impact partners — ACCESS, Dominican, Macomb, Mercy, Parkman and Southwest Solutions — testing literacy applications for hand-held devices provided by Charter One Foundation. They’re designed for the beginning reader, and initial reports show that adults otherwise uncomfortable in a beginning reading program are having fun with these apps. They help build confidence and give learners a jump on more intensive programs. The second pilot pairs the Dominican Literacy Program with Detroit Public Schools Adult Education East Campus to provide small-group tutoring to help learners advance faster. And the third pilot pairs the St. Vincent and Sarah Fisher Center with the Detroit Rescue Mission for a literacy program involving female shelter residents and their school-aged children. Even with all these initiatives in progress, perhaps the greatest gift Reading Works can provide to our partners and learners is a consistent voice for change. Reading Works is seeking committee volunteers over the next six months to help us communicate with businesses and policy-makers who can help with funding and in-kind support. The needs are great. To increase capacity at our current and new partners and reach 20,000 learners by 2020, we will need hundreds — maybe thousands — of volunteers, and millions of dollars. It can be done, but only if we continue to work together. “Through our collaboration,” said Diane Renaud, executive director and CEO of the St. Vincent and Sarah Fisher Center, “all of the partners have raised a larger collective voice for adult education. We’re dealing with an important barrier — it inhibits true economic change in Detroit.” Not only is this worth our investment as a community, it’s critical now if we are truly going to realize the prosperity we seek for our city and our region. Adults are either productive or they’re not. The more we help them join the work force and take care of their families, the more they will contribute immediately to rebuilding our communities. Consider that, according to a study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, $7.14 is returned to our economy for every $1 spent on adult literacy. We cannot afford to concentrate on only schoolchildren — as important as they are — and wait for them to grow up to address the lack of an educated work force in our community. We cannot risk the future of our children by neglecting the needs of their parents. We cannot turn away from adults who could be gainfully employed. We cannot rebuild our neighborhoods without productive people to live in them. Join with Reading Works — make a contribution, volunteer to help, become a tutor. There’s no greater investment you could make for the future of our city, our region and our state. Paul Anger is editor and publisher of the Detroit Free Press and chairman of the Reading Works board of directors and Paula Brown is executive director of Reading Works. EDITORIAL: Two plans, lots of opportunity for Detroit schools city pensions. Aid for Detroit is a tough sell in Lansing, and some measure of state-level accountability will surely be required to get a deal done. How can the governor and the coalition come together? Coalition members have community credibility. Endorsement of a temporarily appointed board could sooth residents’ and parents’ fears. It’s a big ask, but political reality narrows opportunities for common ground. FROM PAGE 19A splitting DPS into an “old company” and a “new company,” similar to General Motors during bankruptcy. The old district would collect DPS’ non-homestead 18-mill operating levy, and use that money to retire DPS’ $483 million in operating debt. The new City of Detroit Education District would handle the business of educating children, using the state’s perpupil foundation allowance and a subsidy from the School Aid Fund. The new district would initially be governed by an appointed board — three by Detroit’s mayor, four by the governor. Appointed members would phase out, starting in 2017, and the board would be all-elected by 2021. Both plans foresee the creation of new entities to provide oversight or consistency, but present starkly different images for the future of DPS governance. The coalition envisions a citywide commission to call the shots on school openings and closures, across traditional public schools, EAA schools and charters, as well as community-led school and regional advisory bodies to give parents and other stakeholders input. The governor’s plan would also create a commission, that would hire an education manager to administer common enrollment, coordinate school closures and monitor school performance. A state review commission would oversee each district until DPS’ debt is retired. Where they’re alike: Both suggest the retention of a public school district, configured much the way Detroit Public Schools is now, and they agree that, ultimately, that district should be managed by a locally elected school board. That’s a significant starting point, and a victory of sorts for Detroiters who worried that Snyder, whose close adviser Paul Pastorek helped create an all-charter school district for New Orleans, might try the same here. Opportunities: Splitting the district would handle DPS’ debt, and a new district could be more functional, if it works. Snyder should consider the coalition’s plan a good backup — because it may be the only viable plan. The EAA 2014 PHOTO BY RYAN GARZA/DETROIT FREE PRESS 2009 PHOTO BY SUSAN TUSA/DETROIT FREE PRESS Gov. Rick Snyder and a coalition of Detroit community, business and civic leaders have different school visions, but there’s room for agreement. The expectations of parents and futures of children in the city ride on the ability of everyone involved to settle those differences in school visions. Funding which sufficient lawmakers vote “yes” on a plan that includes this provision. And they shouldn’t have to. The coalition’s recommendation offers a straightforward way to handle the district’s debt. Snyder’s own plan acknowledges state responsibility for DPS’ debt. So why take it out of local districts? State assumption of district debt won’t be an easy sell, but compared to the battle royal that Snyder’s plan would launch, we’ll take it. Snyder should use what political capital he possesses to lobby outright for state responsibility for DPS’ debt. Where they’re different: The coalition points out a truth many in Lansing or outstate won’t like or won’t accept: Much of the district’s debt was racked up under state control. The state is constitutionally responsible for the bulk of DPS’ debt — and it’s also morally obligated. The district has suffered through not one but two state takeovers, all predicated on the theory that the state would leave the district in an improved condition. That hasn’t happened. The district’s debt is crushing its ability to operate — interest alone consumes about 13% of revenue, compared to 2% or 3% in other districts. DPS spends about 43% of its operating funds on instruction; other districts spend up to 64%, the coalition report found. The coalition’s plan embraces the state’s moral responsibility for DPS’ debt, and asks the state to assume full responsibility for the obligation. The governor’s doesn’t. Where they’re alike: In the governor’s plan to split DPS, the old district would collect the existing operating millage to pay down DPS’ debt. The new, unencumbered district would operate free of debt, using the state’s perpupil allowance to fund operations. But the loss of the millage-generated funds means the new district would be about $53 million to $72 million in the hole. And here’s where the governor’s plan at least tacitly acknowledges that DPS needs financial help — Snyder proposes backstopping the district’s budget hole with money from the School Aid Fund, amounting to a $50-per-pupil cut in districts across the state. It’s a recognition that DPS’ circumstances are different than other Michigan school districts, even those that are financially struggling, and over time, it means the state will send as much or more to DPS as it would have if it took DPS’ debt outright. Opportunities: The governor’s proposed $50-per-pupil cut is the most noxious part of this plan. Parents and superintendents in metro Detroit and outstate districts — many in financial jeopardy themselves — will mount fierce opposition to any per-pupil cut, particularly if those funds go to another district. It’s a false dilemma, creating animosity where none needs to exist by pitting school districts against each other. It’s so ill-conceived, we wonder whether it’s a poison pill; we can’t imagine a scenario in Local control Where they’re different: Local control is probably the clearest demarcation between the coalition’s plan and Snyder’s. The coalition would keep the Detroit Public Schools intact and its elected board in place; in fact, the board’s authority would widen, as the schools currently in the Educational Achievement Authority — which is the state’s reform district — would transition back to DPS control. The coalition would see the creation of a handful of new entities that would have a say in DPS, all locally composed. In Snyder’s plan, the elected board would remain in control of the old district, responsible for paying down DPS’ debt. The new district would be governed by an appointed board. Members of that board would be appointed by the governor and the mayor of Detroit; appointed members would begin to cycle off the board in 2017. By 2021, the board would be composed entirely of locally elected members. But it’s not, at least at the outset, local control. Snyder also proposes a state financial oversight board for both the old district and the new district, at least until the old district’s debt is retired. Where they’re alike: Both plans envision the addition of several other entities, but there’s a lot of daylight between them. Opportunities: It galls us that Detroit, alone among districts in the state, should be asked or forced to sacrifice local control. Communities have an absolute right to decide how to educate their children. But both plans hinge on a significant state financial contribution, and this is the reality: Money always comes with strings attached. During the city’s bankruptcy, an oversight board was a condition of the grand bargain that protected the Detroit Institute of Arts’ collection and shored up Where they’re different: What to do about the Educational Achievement Authority, the state reform district for low-performing schools? The reform district has been wildly controversial, its successes still largely a matter of theory, not practice. It also has been dogged by embarrassing financial scandals that haven’t instilled community confidence. The coalition thinks the EAA’s days are over, that the schools allotted to the district should be returned to DPS under the oversight of the district’s elected board, and that schools that are still struggling use existing turnaround resources at the state level. The governor thinks the EAA is worth preserving. His plan doesn’t deal specifically with the EAA, but his spokeswoman told us last week that Snyder believes the EAA’s methods work — suggesting that the reform district, at least in the short term, is here to stay. Where they’re alike: It’s hard to find common ground on this one. Opportunities: The governor should take the coalition’s suggestions to heart. The EAA has done little to justify its existence. Returning the EAA schools to district oversight — especially with the new layers of accountability that Snyder hopes to add — could prove positive for kids in EAA schools. Regardless, we don’t see much hope for the EAA. Enrollment has dropped by 25% in the four years that it’s existed, to little more than 7,000; we think that trend will continue. How many students can the district lose before it becomes obsolete? 6A WWW.FREEP.COM SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 TOXIC ALGAE: Ohio’s governor and environmental chief are asking leaders in Michigan and other neighboring states to look at taking new steps to fight the toxic algae blooms that have turned Lake Erie green in recent summers. Talks started recently with officials from Michigan, Indiana and Ontario, Canada, about reducing the algae linked to contaminated drinking water and dead zones where fish can’t survive. METRO 313-222-6600 localnews@freepress.com Associated Press Success stories, one reader at a time Initiative is model for workforce training T ERIC SEALS/DETROIT FREE PRESS Mary Olczak, 55, of Allen Park in the computer lab at the Dominican Center in Detroit on Saturday, has been tutoring adults at the center for the last nine years. She now works with six students a day. he good news is that Gov. Rick Snyder, some state legislators and many education officials have finally begun focusing on the challenge of training people with limited reading skills to get jobs that exist and that are coming. The great news is that several community organizations, businesses and metro leaders across the region have done the same through the Reading Works initiative, which vets, convenes and supports literacy agencies in many ways, including helping raise money for them to do ROCHELLE RILEY SHINES A LIGHT ON THE READING WORKS INITIATIVE their jobs better. The best news is that this mission has people like Mary Olczak. Olczak was born and raised in Ecorse and lives in Allen Park. She was a senior security supervisor at the “I love reading, and I feel so bad for people who can’t do it. It is totally delightful when a young student meets their goals.” MARY OLCZAK, who has taught 22 people to read Renaissance Center before General Motors moved in. When she left that job, she looked for ways to give back to her community and found the Dominican Literacy Center. That was nine years ago. In that time, Olczak has taught 22 people to read — more than any other tutor. And she has no intention of Friends, family gather at Stony Creek to mourn boys Three 17-year-olds killed attended high schools in Utica district stopping any time soon. “I love reading!” she said with the excitement of someone who truly love books. “I love to read, and I want others to enjoy it as much as I do. Not to mention, I believe so much in the importance of education.” Olczak is among hundreds See RILEY, Page 12A Mich. GOP elects Berden to RNC post She replaces Ronna Romney McDaniel By Paul Egan Detroit Free Press By Robin Erb Detroit Free Press Friends, classmates and parents came to Stony Creek Metropark on Saturday to sort through anger and grief, making their way through long grass littered with broken glass and car parts left behind from a car wreck Friday that left three teens dead and two seriously injured. Killed were Jonathan Manolios and Emanuel Malaj of Sterling Heights and Michael Wells of Macomb Township. All were17 and students at Utica Community Schools. “I’m pissed. I’m angry. So many of us get to right our wrongs. These kids don’t,” said a tearful Sherrie Logan of Dryden. Manolios was her nephew; she and her daughter, Allie Logan, 14, leaned a bouquet of blue and pink daisies against the chain-link fence, bent at the place where the car had gone into the water. “There’s no chance to undo this, to right this wrong,” she said, covering her eyes and holding onto her daughter. Over the edge of the fence, a single rose swirled in the water where the teens’ four-door Jaguar S-type sedan came to rest after it clipped a guardrail, overturned down a grassy embankment and dropped 20 feet to the rocks and water below. Two Shelby Township youths, also 17, remain hospitalized. “Everyone wants me to tell them what happened, and I can’t answer that” this early in the investigation, Macomb County Sheriff Anthony Wickersham PHOTOS BY ERIC SEALS/DETROIT FREE PRESS TOP: Allie Logan, 14, of Dryden is comforted by her mother, Sherrie Logan, on Saturday at Stony Creek Metropark in Shelby Township. They came to the site of the fatal crash Friday and placed flowers at the fence. One of the victims, Jonathan Manolios of Sterling Heights, was Allie’s cousin, Sherrie’s nephew. LEFT: Thomas Alsobrooks, 15, of Shelby Township follows his father Mike Alsobrooks through tire marks down to the car crash scene. Alsobrooks wanted to warn his son, who has his driver’s permit, about the dangers of reckless driving. Although all the details about the crash are not known yet, the Macomb County Sheriff says evidence indicates the teens’ vehicle was traveling fast. See CRASH, Page 9A LANSING — The state committee of the Michigan Republican Party elected Kathy Berden as the party’s new national committeewoman at a meeting in northern Michigan Saturday, a party spokeswoman confirmed. Berden of Snover in Sanilac County needed two ballots to defeat Mary Whiteford of South Haven in Allegan County, because no one won a majority on the first ballot. “I look forward to meeting with activists across the state and working with candidates and volunteers to build Kathy our party and Berden turn Michigan red in 2016,” Berden said after her election. Berden replaces Ronna Romney McDaniel, who in February was elected state party chairwoman. Eliminated after the first ballot was state Rep. Cindy Gamrat of Plainwell, also in Allegan County. Berden, 61, is a state committee member and former chairwoman of the Sanilac County Republican Party who was a Michigan delegate to the 2012 Republican convention in Tampa. The state committee — which has 113 members mostly elected at the congressional district level — elected Berden during a meeting at Boyne Mountain Resort near Boyne Falls in Charlevoix County, See GOP, Page 12A Deaf juror glad to do her duty for justice Court provides sign language interpreters By Elisha Anderson Detroit Free Press ERIC SEALS/DETROIT FREE PRESS Tracy Straub, 45, with her miniature pinscher named Whino in her Trenton home. Straub, who is deaf, served as a juror in an armed robbery case in Wayne County Circuit Court last month. Tracy Straub’s eyes shifted between witnesses on the stand, exhibits displayed on a TV screen and sign language interpreters as she sat in a Detroit courtroom. The 45-year-old Trenton woman, who was born deaf, served as juror in an armed robbery case in Wayne County Circuit Court last month, welcoming the chance to be in- volved in the judicial system. “I’ve got a lot of friends that are deaf and have never served jury duty before,” Straub told the Free Press through an interpreter. “So I’m kind of the rock star in that way.” She watched as John Stuckless and Bethany James took turns signing the words of witnesses testifying in the trial of a person who was accused of robbing a man and being present when he was shot. The interpreters stood at the front of the courtroom, near the court reporter, for about15 to 20 minutes at a time. Then they switched to prevent fatigue during testimony. “They don’t interject an opinion, they don’t offer advice, they don’t advocate,” said Laurie Finch, owner of University Translators Services. “They strictly interpret.” Her company, based in Ann Arbor, works with courts in Wayne and Washtenaw counties and provides American Sign Language interpreters for witnesses, plaintiffs, defendants and others in courtrooms. But it’s rare to have a sign language interpreter for a juror. Finch said she has been in the business for 28 years and hasn’t seen deaf people on juries until recently. The State Court Administrative Office doesn’t keep statistics on the number of accommodations requested so people with disabilities can serve on juries, and the courts pay for the services, said spokesman John Nevin. SCAO works with local courts so people with disabilities “have access to all aspects of the justice system,” he said. If jurors are summoned and have a disability, they can indicate they don’t want to serve for that reason, said Jim Inloes, See JUROR, Page 9A 12A WWW.FREEP.COM METRO w SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 GOP: Party’s state committee elects Kathy Berden to RNC post RILEY: Helping others find success, one reader at a time FROM PAGE 6A FROM PAGE 6A of volunteers across the region helping adults to improve their reading skills to earn GEDs or enter job training that requires a higher level of reading than they attained in school. The increased effort to improve reading comes as Snyder touts Michigan as a businessfriendly state ready for companies to move in. That can happen only if the state has qualified workers. That means improving reading, encouraging trade skills and ending the cycle of poverty that is fed by poor schools. For Olczak, becoming a tutor has become not just her donation to Detroit, but also her passion. “In the beginning, I was working in the computer lab,” she said. “But then, I was maintaining the lab plus tutoring students how to read on the computer at that time. Right now, the philosophy of our program is one-to-one tutoring. I start sometimes at 10 o’clock in the morning and don’t leave until 8 o clock at night, three days a week.” Olczak, who graduated from Ecorse High School before earning a bachelor’s in accounting from the University of Michigan and an MBA from Madonna University in Livonia, now works with six students a day. And she has had many success stories, including a student she helped to pass her citizenship test, another who got his first driver’s license at age 26, and still another who is, she said, “a sliver away from getting her GED.” “I will continue to work with her until she gets her GED,” Olczak. “I will not stop ERIC SEALS/DETROIT FREE PRESS Mary Olczak, left, has been a tutor at the Dominican Center in Detroit for the last nine years. She is at the center with one of her students, Teresa VanArsdale, 48, of Detroit, who is getting help with geometry and is well on her way to getting her GED with Olczak’s help. the month. I cannot turn down a good home-cooked Polish meal. That is some incentive.” Olczak hopes talking about her work will encourage others to join the cause and become tutors, something she said benefits the teacher as much as the student. “The experience is so hard to put into words, she said. “It’s an abstract experience. I know the need, especially the students that can’t read. I love reading, and I feel so bad for people who can’t do it. It is totally delightful when a young student meets their goals. I don’t plan to stop until God tells me to stop.” ROCHELLE RILEY TO COHOST WJR SHOW Detroit Free Press columnist Rochelle Riley has joined veteran newswoman Marie Osborne as cohost of the newest talk show on WJRAM (760). Called “In the Mix with Marie and Rochelle,” the show is what Osborne calls “a blend of news, politics, lifestyle, entertainment, art and pop culture with a fresh point of view.” The show airs at 4 p.m. on Sundays. Riley, whose radio experience has included appearances locally on WDET-FM (101.9) and WJR, and nationally on NPR, has been writing for the Free Press since 2000. “I’m excited to join a tradition of excellence at WJR and to help create something new,” said Riley. “I think that Marie and I are onto something special. I love working with a veteran of her caliber, and I believe our show will capture all the ups and downs of a city on the rise — heartbreak, joy, pain and celebration.” until we’re successful. I wouldn’t give it up.” Teaching people to read benefits more than the improved reader. Olczak also has made some lifelong friends. “The young lady I helped to get her citizenship, she and I still keep in touch quite a bit,” she said. “I have lunch with her many times during where the party held its spring training conference. Posts on the Republican National Committee are unpaid. Berden joins former state Rep. Dave Agema on the RNC. Agema has resisted calls from RNC Chairman Reince Priebus, former state party Chairman Bobby Schostak and others to resign over racist and antigay messages he has posted on social media. Berden and the other two candidates pledged to work with Agema and did not join the calls for him to resign. Both Berden and Whiteford claimed significant endorsements. Berden was endorsed by Paul Mitchell, the Republican congressional candidate who led the successful fight against the Proposal 1 sales tax and road funding proposal in Tuesday’s special election. Berden was also endorsed by U.S. Rep. Candice Miller, R-Harrison Township, and state Sens. Mike Green of Mayville and Phil Pavlov of St. Clair Township, among other state lawmakers. Whiteford was endorsed by state Senate Majority Leader Arlan Meekhof, RWest Olive; Sen. John Proos, R-St. Joseph, and Rep. Lisa Posthumus Lyons, R-Alto, among other lawmakers. Whiteford, 50, of South Haven is a state committee member who is vice chair of the Allegan County Republican Party. In 2014, she lost the GOP nomination in the 80th House District to Gamrat. Also Saturday, the party’s policy committee postponed consideration of a proposal to move to a closed presidential primary — a question that became a major issue in the national committeewoman election campaign. Many in the party’s tea party wing say they don’t want crossover voting by Democrats to influence the choice of the Republican nominee. Others say that influence is too minimal to justify the limited participation and cost that a closed primary would produce. Contact Paul Egan: 517-372-8660 or pegan@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @paulegan4. Contact Rochelle Riley: 313-223-4473. Follow her on Twitter @rochelleriley. Read more about the Reading Works initiative in today’s “A Better Michigan” section. MAKE AN UNFORGE T TA BL E CHOICE . JUST ANNOUNCED, CURRENT LINCOLN OWNERS AND LESSEES GET $1,500 1 TOWARD THE PURCHASE OR LEASE OF A NEW 2015 ATS OR SRX THIS MONTH, AND $2,500 1 TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OR LEASE OF A 2015 CTS OR XTS. USE IT TO GET THIS GREAT LEASE OFFER. CURRENT GM LESSEES GET $750 2 TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OR LEASE OF SELECT NEW 2015 CADILL AC VEHICLES. 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