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Detroit Public Schools’ $700M Proposal Would Invest in District Buildings

African American teacher with protective face mask holding a class at the school. Copy space.

A multimillion investment to the Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD) would mean new opportunities for a district with aging buildings in desperate need of a facelift.  

A recent DPSCD announcement unveiled a proposed Facility Master Plan for the future of school building use in Detroit, according to a press release.

The plan is the next phase of the commitment to continue the process of rebuilding the District after Emergency Management through improved school buildings.   

“One of the first things I observed during the superintendent interview process in 2017 was the overall low condition of school buildings. Over the last four years, I am proud of the fact that the District experienced facility investments for the first time in over a decade through unspent expenditures, but this was simply putting a band aide on a life-threatening wound. Access to federal relief funding provides us now with an opportunity to make a substantial short and long-term investment in our school buildings that paves the way to a broader investment plan to right size the district and provide each employee and student with a school building they deserve,” said Dr. Nikolai Vitti, Superintendent, DPSCD

The Facility Master Plan provides a 20-year facilities vision and investment plan for the District. The District requires $2 billion to upgrade all school buildings to a “good” rating based on a Facilities Condition Index (FCI), which determines the extent of facility investment to restore a building to its best operational level. The District recommends investing $700 million by 2027 as it works to acquire access to equitable state funding to address its long-term facility needs. The plan seeks to protect neighborhood schools and feeder patterns, placing students in the best school building as possible with the review of FCI, current enrollment, local demographic studies, and school building utilization.  

The plan will support maximizing utilization of district school buildings, improving the overall condition of schools through some new school buildings and renovations focused on HVAC, roofs, and masonry. It will also place significant investment in the expansion of Pre-K strengthen feeder pattern enrollment. All the recommendations will be explained and vetted by internal and external stakeholders through seven public meetings, three of which will be in person. The feedback from those meetings will hone the District’s plan and lead to a final recommendation to the School Board for the $700M investment in facilities by June 2022.  

The highlights of the recommended Facility Master Plan include:  

“This is another step in the process to making impactful short and long-term changes to provide a sustainable path forward for the largest public school district in the city and the state; this plan is not set in stone. The plan is thorough and thoughtful guided by strong data to inform and steer the conversations, engagements, and final realistic solutions,” said Angelique Peterson-Mayberry, Board Chair. “We need your help. Each community in every feeder pattern will have an opportunity to participate in an engagement session, to review the plan. We want to hear from students, staff, families, and community members to share their feedback and thoughts to help refine our initial thinking leading to a final Facility Master Plan. We know when everyone does their part, students rise.” 

Over the next two months, the community is invited to participate in the seven public meetings to better understand the District’s initial recommendations and provide feedback on the plan. Below is the tentative set of dates, time, and location of the meetings:  

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