State Steps Up Intervention, Could Take Over Bham Schools
State BOE Votes to Step Up Involvement in B’ham Schools
Total Takeover of Finances Could Be Around The Corner
The Alabama State Board of Education today voted 6-0 to have the state oversee the Birmingham School
Board’s day-to-day financial operations, specifically its implementation of the cost-cutting plan the local
board approved Tuesday evening.
And according to the resolution passed today, if the local board hasn’t pushed ahead with the financial
recovery plan to the state’s satisfaction by June 22, or doesn’t approve those cuts at its meeting
scheduled for June 26, the state will take total control of the district’s purse strings. That would include,
among other things, instating a CFO who’d report to state superintendent Tommy Bice.
State law requires school districts to have one month’s operating expenses in reserve. Birmingham
should have about $17 million but has only $2 million. On top of that, drops in enrollment — which
translate into a $6-million decrease in money coming from the state — means next fiscal year is looking
bleak, with a multimillion-dollar deficit almost guaranteed.
The plan the local board adopted on a third try Tuesday, which is really just a framework — names still
have to be connected to the cut positions — had become just one of the pitched battles bedeviling the
fractious local board recently.
“This back-and-forth political posturing has got to stop. There are children involved. There are teachers
waiting,” Bice told the state board before the vote. “The whole school system is on hold, and I am very
concerned.”
“The children are at stake,” said Yvette Richardson, the state board member whose district includes
Birmingham. “Something needs to be done.”
She pointed out that the state was originally invited to investigate by several members of the
Birmingham board itself, and that other area school districts have been through state takeovers and
come out more fiscally sound for it.
Birmingham was one of 30 systems in the state that failed to meet the reserve-fund requirement. Each
had to submit a remedial plan by May 1. Birmingham was the only district that missed the deadline. It
did submit an outline of a plan, but was supposed to come back with a more detailed plan, which didn’t
happen.
The adopted cost-cutting plan, a slightly modified version of what the state’s investigative team
proposed weeks earlier, would save the system about $12 million, mainly by cutting staff, and most of
those positions from the central office. Birmingham has far more administrators per student than most
comparable districts. If there’s no takeover, the Birmingham Board of Education would still have to
approve each personnel cut and other cost-saving measures — not a simple or painless process no
matter who undertakes it.
Birmingham Board President Edward Maddox said late Thursday, “Basically, the resolution [approved by
the state board today] is going along with what we’d already done — it wasn’t necessary. We’re
obligated to do what’s best for our children and this city. We’re going to implement that plan.”
A Manson Family member was recommended for parole again. But she’s not free just yet
Patricia Krenwinkel was 21 when she participated in the August 1969 murders. Her parole recommendation would need to be approved by Gov. Gavin Newsom, who rejected the last one in 2022.
Mount Etna erupts, shooting a massive ash cloud into the sky and raising alerts
Mount Etna produced a spectacularly explosive eruption Monday, sending a ripple of reddish clouds down from the southeast summit of Europe's highest active volcano.
WBHM 90.3, Gulf States Newsroom win nine 2025 Regional Edward R. Murrow Awards
The Radio Television Digital News Association announced Region 9 Edward R. Murrow Award winners in 23 categories May 22. The Murrow Awards began in 1971 and are among the most prestigious in journalism.
Months after a martial law crisis, South Koreans will elect a new president
Whoever is elected, the new president will have little time for celebration.
These researchers think the sludge in your home may help save the planet
What if the solutions to some of Earth's biggest problems could be found in some of its smallest creatures? That bet has led a team of researchers to places both remote and — lately — rather familiar.
How a Los Angeles camp made space to let kids be kids after the wildfires
After the wildfires destroyed homes and disrupted routines, many parents saw behavioral shifts in their kids. Some families found support in a camp designed to help kids affected by natural disaster.