Citing cost, the Osseo Area school board is poised to end a five-year-old consulting contract with a group that advises the district on how to lessen racial disparities and narrow an achievement gap.
The board has said it intends to conduct in-house the kind of work that Pacific Educational Group (PEG) has helped with since 2012.
School board members have said that the district, where students of color make up more than half the enrollment, can no longer support a 2016-17 cost of $152,000 for PEG's services. At its Tuesday night meeting, the board appeared likely to cease contracting with PEG after the 2017-18 school year.
"Our school board, as recently as the March 7 work session, have all expressed support for our work," said Superintendent Kate Maguire. "The one place where they are less certain is the work specifically with Pacific Educational Group, which is just one component of some foundational training."
Achievement gap
In the five years since the district formed its partnership with PEG, school board members say, the group has not helped to close the district's achievement gap and has been involved in controversies along the way.
Terms of the contract have changed based on what the district's needs are, said Luis Versalles, director of pre-K-12 district partnerships for the firm.
"Osseo should be proud of the capacity they have developed and are developing" by working with PEG on training, Versalles said.
Part of budget plan
The school board is reviewing its Achievement and Integration plan and budget before submitting it to the Minnesota Department of Education. While drafting the plan, the board is deciding on the fate of a PEG partnership that it already has been phasing out over several years.