The New York Times Magazine published a heart-breaking photo essay about the abandonment of schools in Puerto Rico, first because of its debt crisis, then because of federal privatization policy after hurricanes in 2017.
The Island has been strangled by financiers, then raped by DeVos-style policies, and the public schools were the victims.
The writer was Jonathan M. Katz.
It begins:
During the blazing summer of 2019, Puerto Rico was in tumult. Thousands of the islands’ residents marched shoulder to shoulderthrough cities. They sang, danced and demanded the ouster of the commonwealth’s negligent governor, Ricardo Rosselló — and, with him, the federal control board that holds economic power over the United States’ oldest remaining colony in the Americas.
The crowd’s ire was fueled in part by a sense of absence. Away from the echoing drums, down forgotten streets and across green mountains, the islands are emptying. Decades of abuse, austerity, corruption and now the ravages of climate change have triggered an exodus of people and money. As the summer wet season gives way to the wary hurricane watch of an ever-warmer fall, no evidence of this decline is more powerful than the islands’ hundreds of abandoned schools.
The photographer Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi and I spent weeks touring these monuments to neglect. Books and blackboards rotted in the humidity. Stray dogs made their beds beneath teachers’ desks. Some of the buildings had been left to addicts and thieves. In others, neighbors had refashioned empty classrooms into stables for horses, rabbits and pigs. Even in schools that remain in use, mold creeps, roofs are torn and gymnasiums sag like wet shoe boxes. Landslide-prone slopes loom, unrestrained, behind buildings filled with students….
The hurricanes weren’t the beginning of the story, though. The disasters compounded a social and economic calamity that has been brewing for over a century. It arguably began in 1898, when United States forces invaded Puerto Rico, then a colony of Spain, during the Spanish-American War. Before the war, Spain had grudgingly granted Puerto Rico limited home rule, an attempt to forestall an independence movement. But with the advent of American rule, Puerto Rico fell deeper into colonial status. The islands’ people could not elect their own governor until 1947. They still cannot vote for president and have no voting representation in Congress.
Puerto Rico’s economy grew for decades, thanks to a series of tax breaks for companies from the mainland. Washington allowed the territorial government to borrow money by issuing tax-exempt municipal bonds and repay them with the rising revenues. When the last of those tax breaks ended in 2006, the economy stalled, leaving its government overleveraged and with few options. The commonwealth’s leaders began issuing riskier bonds that may have circumvented constitutional protections. Major lenders including UBS, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Santander have since been sued multiple times — some have settled — for underwriting them. In 2015, with $120 billion in bond obligations and unfunded pensions, the governor was forced to declare that Puerto Rico would stop making many debt payments.
Under an agreement signed by President Obama, Puerto Rico gained protection from lawsuits. In exchange, its economy fell under the control of a seven-member Financial Oversight and Management Board with offices in New York and San Juan. Instead of forgiving Puerto Rico’s debt, the board implemented a strict austerity regime, which has grown steadily more draconian.
As conditions worsened, the trickle of people leaving for the mainland turned into a flood. Between 2009 and 2017, the population declined 12 percent, from 3.9 million to 3.4 million, according to the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College. The “Great Depression of Puerto Rico” had begun, José Caraballo-Cueto, an economist and associate professor at the University of Puerto Rico-Cayey, told me. “We have to acknowledge that the stock of human capital is decreasing,” he said.
The appointment of Julia Keleher as the Island’s Secretary of Education was a disaster. She fully agreed with the Trump administration’s determination to implement privatization with charters and vouchers. She was Betsy DeVos Without the billions.
Soon after taking office in 2017, Rosselló brought Julia Keleher, the founder of a small Washington education consultancy, to take over the fragile school system. Keleher, who is from the Philadelphia area, had a reputation as an expert at winning government grants. Indeed, her firm had recently obtained a $231,000 contract with the department she was about to head.
Keleher quickly embarked on a two-pronged mission to overhaul the school system. She pushed for the creation of semi-privatized charter schools and private-school vouchers. At the same time, she shut down hundreds of still-functioning public schools. Defending her actions, she later said: “Somebody had to be the responsible adult in the room.” Keleher, who is white, also likened the fury she received from Puerto Rican parents and the islands’ well-organized teachers’ union to the experience of being a racial minority…
At the end of the 2016-17 school year, Keleher ordered 183 schools shuttered, according to the Asociación de Maestros de Puerto Rico, the territory’s teachers’ union and Keleher’s most implacable foe…An estimated 160,000 more Puerto Ricans — another 5 percent of the population — have left since the storm. Keleher took the opportunity to further shrink the school system: Of the roughly 1,100 public schools left in Puerto Rico at the time of the storms, more than 250 simply didn’t open again. Most of those abandoned were elementary or middle schools. Some children who remained have since been forced to travel longer distances to attend classes, sometimes on dangerous mountain roads…
The territorial education department was promised $589 million in federal aid to reopen damaged schools, but as of March had received only 4 percent of the money; the rest expires at the end of April 2020. A United States Department of Education inspector general found that Keleher’s department lacked effective controls to prevent “fraud, waste and abuse.” Backlash from parents and the teachers’ union finally forced Keleher to resign in April. Three months later, she was arrested by the F.B.I. in Washington and charged with conspiring to steer contracts to associates at another consulting firm. She pleaded not guilty; the case is proceeding.
During her time in office, Keleher was paid $250,000 a year, while most Puerto Rican’s were living in dire conditions. She will stand trial for steering contracts to favored firms.
The tragedy documented in the Times’ photo essay is the abandonment and destruction of the Island’s schools at the same time that the chief education official was intent on privatizing the schools in service to austerity.
The parents and teachers cared about the children. The U.S. government and the now-deposed government of Puerto Rico did not.







Milton Friedman’s motto* to never miss the ” market opportunity” presented by a good disaster at work.
*Encapsulated by Obama chief of staff Rahm Emanuels
“You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that [is] it’s an opportunity to do things that you think you could not before.”
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they should just change “could not do” to “could not get away with…”
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Given the activities of Bill and Melinda Gates in privatizing public schools, what is the probability that they align with Robert and Rebekah Mercer, who protect the oligarchy by grinding democracy into dirt?
The Mercers are fans of an ideologue who said the “socialist agenda of public schools is evil”.
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It is tragic that the children of Puerto Rico have had to endure a horrific hurricane. They have had to further endure the dislocation and disruption of government malfeasance and the loss of the schools that anchor their communities and give them semblance of normalcy.
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“During her time in office, Keleher was paid $250,000 a year,”
It is sickening to see so many schools closing and that children have to walk through long distances to get to a school.
I simply don’t understand people in power. Why do they work to destroy when people are struggling to survive?
I feel sorry that the people in Puerto Rico are despised by our Orange Buffoon. Throwing paper towels is about as far as he could go to show how much he cared and understood starvation and homelessness. Picking billionaire DeVos shows how much he cares about public schools.
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“I hate to tell you, Puerto Rico, but you’ve thrown our budget a little out of whack because we’ve spent a lot of money on Puerto Rico,” Trump scolded. “But that’s fine. We’ve saved a lot of lives.”
“If you look at a real catastrophe like Katrina and you look at the tremendous hundreds and hundreds and hundreds that died . . . 16 people [in Puerto Rico] versus in the thousands [in Louisiana], you can be very proud of all your people, all our people,” Trump said. “Everybody around this table and everybody watching could be very proud of what has taken place in Puerto Rico.”
“I think it’s now acknowledged what a great job we’ve done, and people are looking at that,” Trump said. “The first responders, the military, FEMA, they have done an incredible job in Puerto Rico. And whether it’s her or anybody else, they’re all starting to say it.”
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All of America’s public schools are disappearing, and the America we now is disappearing , too.
This is the unintended consequences of a new era– a transitional era– where something changes and alters everything. This is the ERA OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOG and it has been adopted by all the charlatans and criminals, the haters and the wreckers. It has been studied and used by the top-dogs, the ones with the money buy experts, since televisions came along, and they discovered that images change EVERYTHING.
Nothing was the same after humankind gave up hunting and gathering– but (at the time) who could have predicted cities and states and the need to have armies to protect them. That is what happened as people settled into villages and towns. Protection was needed.
Nothing was the same once machines were invented to the tasks that humans once did, faster and better. But who could have predicted today’s world. Protection was needed.
The internet is a place of anarchy, where no rules exist. Protection was needed, not merely from the big tech companies who gather our data, but from those who will use it to disseminate fear and division.
Cyberspace is a perfect place to promote misinformation and disinformation, and so the power elite weaponized lies… and convinced people that a mongrel was fit to be president… a deal maker, who for lifetime made deals that only benefited himself, and left everyone who trusted him in the dust.
And who could have predicted, that the suborning of the Constitution’s checks and balances, the destruction of the electoral college by gerrymandering, would give us this unabashed crook and malignant, selfish child, as president.
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AND WITH THE TYPOS FIXED (it can’t hurt to say. this again..as this is the essay Iam writing for Oped . called UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES
All of America’s public schools are disappearing, and the America we know is disappearing , too. This is the unintended consequences of a new era– a transitional era– where something changes and alters everything. This is the ERA OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGy and it has been adopted by all the charlatans and criminals, the haters and the wreckers. It has been studied and used by the top-dogs, the ones with the money to buy experts, since televisions came along, and they discovered that images change EVERYTHING.
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Shocking pictures.
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