Posted: 8:49 p.m.
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Middletown’s 4 biggest
challenges outlined by mayor
By
Mike Rutledge
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN —
Leaders
in Middletown
face four major challenges this year, Mayor Larry Mulligan Jr. said Tuesday in
his State of the City address.
Those
four, he said, are deteriorating roadways; expensive federally required repairs
to sewers that overflow during storms; the heroin epidemic; and school
performance.
In
a move that emphasized his fourth point, Mulligan invited Middletown Board of
Education President Chris Urso to share the evening’s stage, and provide a
State of the Schools speech.
With
the schools, “As a community we must step up and address the situation,”
Mulligan said. “Certainly the new and improved facilities will bring the middle
school and high school into the 21stcentury.”
“So
much of our community identity is associated with our schools,” Mulligan said.
“The new school board will be able to address the issues closely and is working
to improve performance.”
Middletown as a district
recently received overall grades of three F’s and a D — F’s in the categories
of percent of standards met; overall value-added; and annual measurable
objectives. The district received a D for its performance index score.
Urso
was blunt in describing the importance of report-card grades.
“In
contemporary times, the most salient measure of a school district’s efficacy is
the State Report Card,” Urso said. “All in attendance this evening realize that
our district’s grade is an impediment to our community’s ability to grow.”
“Our
grade contributes to a narrative, a story, about the capacity of our teachers
and our students while propagating an overall image of our community,” Urso
said. “Your Board of Education fully realizes this reality and intends to
directly confront this issue through the strategic planning process.”
Urso
expressed hope that the strategic plan the district is creating, with input
from a diverse cross-section of Middletown
residents, can lead to significant progress.
Mulligan,
meanwhile, expressed hope that the early childhood education, including Middletown
Community Foundation’s “Ready! Campaign,” will help children, particularly from
disadvantaged families, be prepared for kindergarten, so they can be more
successful throughout their school careers.
Mulligan
mentioned these positives during his speech:
Crime
is down, he said. Overall calls for service dropped 12 percent from 2014 to
2015; Total Part 1 crimes — the most severe ones, including homicide, forcible
rape, robbery, burglary and arson — dropped 17 percent. He said arrests were
down 9 percent and theft-related crimes decreased 15 percent. In addition,
Middletown Municipal Court had its lowest number of cases in 21 years, he said.
Mulligan
thanked the Windamere Event Venue and Art
Gallery, which opened in October and
hosted the speeches, saying the facility demonstrates the rebirth Middletown is
experiencing.
He
also cited construction of the $36 million AK Steel research and innovation
center; and NTE Energy’s $645 million gas-fired power plant as investments that
are creating jobs.
“Activity
at Towne Mall Galleria — once considered a dying mall — is seeing the results
of years of planning and hard work coming to fruition — new retail stores; new
uses with Planet Fitness; new investment in new out-lot locations: Aspen Dental
and BW3’s,” he said.
“Our
future looks brighter — we have a plan in place to start addressing our roads.
We will resolve the sewer issues and the heroin crisis. Working together we
will improve school performance,” he said. “We have the benefit of many great
assets in our community. We will build upon those to achieve our greatest
potential as a city.”
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