PHILADELPHIA - Forty-two of the city's low-performing middle and elementary schools are to be turned over to for-profit companies and universities as part of the nation's largest school privatization plan. <br>
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The School Reform Commission, created by the state after it seized control of the city's public school system in December, voted 3-2 Wednesday in favor of the plan, which affects more than one-quarter of the city's schools and thousands of children. <br>
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The decision turns over 20 schools to a for-profit company, Edison Schools Inc. Twenty-two others will be turned over to other private companies and non-profits, and 28 more will be run by parent groups. The commission already had voted to make Edison the lead consultant in district-wide reforms.<br>
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The changes could be in place by September. No high schools would be handed over to private entities. <br>
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The decision came over the objections of unions, students and some parents who argue that companies like Edison have an unproven track record. <br>
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``I am greatly concerned that the magnitude of the change being proposed is too ambitious at this point,'' commissioner Michael Masch said. Commissioner Sandra Dungee Glenn said Edison had ``a mixed record of performance at best,'' and should be given a more limited role. <br>
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Those concerns were overridden by the three commissioners appointed by Gov. Mark Schweiker - Edison's biggest backer in Pennsylvania. Mayor John F. Street, who appointed the two dissenting commission members, said he accepted the decision. <br>
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Daniel Whelan, a school reform commissioner, said the schools are in immediate need of aggressive reform. ``If anything, we erred on the side of caution,'' he said. <br>
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Other large cities have experimented with privatization by turning over small numbers of schools to private managers, but none on as large a scale as in Philadelphia. <br>
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About two dozen students spent the night before the vote camped outside the city's school administration building, then formed a human chain across its wrought-iron gate and refused to allow anyone inside. <br>
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Andrew Hopkins, a 16-year-old student at Simon Gratz High School, said he was willing to go to jail. <br>
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``It's worth it. We are talking about our education here. They shouldn't be giving these schools to private companies that care mostly about their own profits,'' he said. ``We want a parent vote in every school they want to take over.'' <br>
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The commission decided to postpone the meeting for two hours and move it to another building several blocks away rather than make a forced entry. <br>
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After the vote, commission chairman James Nevels called it ``a historic day'' for the school system, the nation's seventh largest, with 200,000 students in 265 schools and a $1.7 billion annual budget. <br>
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The system's new private partners will be moving into schools where 80 percent of the students qualify for free or reduced-cost meals and more than half score in the bottom quarter on state reading and math tests. <br>
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The commission said it would bring in seven groups to operate 42 schools. Besides Edison, the for-profit companies Chancellor Beacon Academies would run five school and Victory Schools would run three. <br>
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Three of the city's biggest universities - Temple, the University of Pennsylvania and Drexel - would get a share of 12 schools. Universal Cos. would run two schools. <br>
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Edison Schools feature a longer day and school year, a heavy investment in technology and intensive staff development. The company runs 136 schools in 23 states.