Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine that the education a child receives is going to be good here. Why would any of the teachers stay in such an uncertain situation? I would take a look at the faculty turnover this year and see what that says about the future of the school....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe this is a dumb question. Why do they need grants? I thought the whole point was the coalition had raised millions in a week. So what happened? Those pledges never came through??
They raised enough to keep it open for a few years at most. They’ll need more if they want to stay open.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe this is a dumb question. Why do they need grants? I thought the whole point was the coalition had raised millions in a week. So what happened? Those pledges never came through??
Anonymous wrote:I am a seasoned grant writer who has worked in the educational field (writing for after school programs and other initiatives that targeted at-risk youth). This move makes no sense.
Not only do you have the issue that a PP mentioned above, about how a private school with no particular focus on underrepresented groups can claim to benefit the community, but you also have an incredibly constrained funding environment.
In 2025, all philanthropic and governmental donors are swamped with requests, as folks have sought municipal/state and private donor funds to make up for funding cut by the federal government.
Think about it. If you were running a family foundation or even a state-level grant program, and someone said to you "You can either fund this program that provides lunchtime reading support to 3rd graders, or you can find a private school that has already mishandled their finances," which would you choose.
Anonymous wrote:I am a seasoned grant writer who has worked in the educational field (writing for after school programs and other initiatives that targeted at-risk youth). This move makes no sense.
Not only do you have the issue that a PP mentioned above, about how a private school with no particular focus on underrepresented groups can claim to benefit the community, but you also have an incredibly constrained funding environment.
In 2025, all philanthropic and governmental donors are swamped with requests, as folks have sought municipal/state and private donor funds to make up for funding cut by the federal government.
Think about it. If you were running a family foundation or even a state-level grant program, and someone said to you "You can either fund this program that provides lunchtime reading support to 3rd graders, or you can find a private school that has already mishandled their finances," which would you choose.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think they are seeking “investment” in any kind of traditional sense. In other words, I don’t think they are planning a bond offering to buy down more expensive debt or other similar structure. Unless it was genuinely philanthropic, their bonds would not be considered investment grade which would make borrowing costs prohibitively high.
Anonymous wrote:It’s possible that the “consultants” are compensated only as a percentage of grants received, but even so, they lose any shred of credibility based on their press release and “projected” yield. What grants are they expecting?
As a PP wrote, hard to imagine a less grant-friendly time for education.