The Tragedy of Russell, Iowa
April 22nd, 2008 at 10:42am Geraldine
Small towns in Iowa have always feared losing their schools. While businesses can always come back to Main Street, once the school has left, it is gone forever and a large part of town goes with it. Typically, the loss of the school is the tipping point that sends a town into an oblivion from which, it will almost certainly never return. It is this tension that is animating the current conflict over the state’s decision to close the school in Russell Iowa, a town of less than 600 in Lucas County. The school district, (which is most clearly outlined on this map of the neighboring Chariton school district) is the 19th smallest in the state and represents an area with exactly 750 active registered voters.
The state is closing the school chiefly because the school district has continually run into budget issues and is projected to have a budget deficit of $382,000 by the end of the school year (which is a very significant debt for a school district with five fourth graders and a graduating class of 12.) The school also had other non-compliance issues including a lack of handicapped-accessible facilities as well.
Locals are claiming a conspiracy to shut down the school. The Russell School Board President told the Ottumwa Courier, “It became clear to me their goal was to shut us down…I started to think to myself that this was a sham. I think that was their agenda from the beginning: Shut us down.” However, while the local residents of Russell rail about a plot by the State Board of Education to shut down their schools, they aren’t addressing the most important issue, their children’s education. According to the State Board of Education, eight of the school district’s teachers were not properly licensed in one of the smallest school districts in the state.
It seems what is neglected in this is the basic fact that this is about the education of the children of Russell. While having its own school may help sustain a small town, it doesn’t help the children who attend the school. In such a small and limited school, one can’t imagine that there are many AP classes or opportunities for advanced instruction. Parents are forced to choose between dooming their town and handicapping their children in life. It is a tragic choice. But, in the end, whether Russell, Iowa continues as a small town of 559 instead of a settlement much smaller is not worth impeding the education of one child.
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Entry Filed under: State Politics
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4 Comments Add your own
1. Chris | April 30th, 2008 at 9:57 pm
Get your facts straight, there were not eight teachers that had wrong licenses. The state screwed up and had to revise the report. There was only ONE that was improperly licensed and he is now gone. Typical liberal media. Keep exemplifying the stereotype…lies and spin. I know many people that have went to that school and they are now highly educated professionals. Try visiting Russell and you might change your mind.
2. J.D. Moser | May 3rd, 2008 at 7:44 am
There is nothing wrong with the school I have been to Russell many times and my relation that lives there is doing just fine. It would be a shame to see the town vanish because where the schools are the people are. The state would be destroying a community.
3. enos | June 6th, 2008 at 9:46 pm
I lived there for many years, my entire childhood till the age of thirteen. Now in my thirties knowing what i now know the town was DOOMed. A small part of me is saddened, the rest beams.
4. Iowa Progress » Sno&hellip | December 10th, 2009 at 2:59 pm
[…] the real issue, that many young people are leaving rural Iowa because there are no jobs. Towns are shrinking as agriculture becomes increasingly mechanized and small factories are shutting down. Bigger towns […]
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