91茄子

91茄子
Whittier Elementary students rally for the modernization of their school. Photo credit: Whittier Elementary PTO

Rat infestation, radiator explosion, mold plague D.C. school

Despite multiple attempts by teachers, parents, and local ANC commissioners to call DCPS and the D.C. Department of General Services to action, Whittier Elementary School remains in a state of disrepair.

When Whittier Elementary鈥檚 radiator exploded back in October, it was the last straw for many parents, teachers, and staff, who gathered together last month to call for the Ward 4 school鈥檚 modernization.

They were lucky 鈥 the hallway was empty when the explosion occurred, but students, teachers, and staff at Whittier are still facing a constant struggle while trying to learn and work in unsafe conditions.

Angela Anderson, president of Whittier Elementary’s Parent Teacher Organization, said that a firefighter told her, “Listen, this will not stop happening. And you’re lucky someone wasn’t here because the pressure in these old steam systems, it’s so strong that it can sever a body part.”

Anderson said that the Department of General Services, which handles maintenance across DCPS, sends someone out to take a photo of the issue and then mark the service ticket as resolved even if it is not.

“Who is holding DGS accountable?” Anderson asked. “Who is coming behind them and doing that final check to see if it’s been done?”

DGS did not respond to email requests for comment.

In an email statement, D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said, 鈥淲ork orders are key to any maintenance program. If DGS can鈥檛 manage its work orders then its maintenance program is going to fail. DGS鈥 approach to maintenance is completely inefficient. The mismanagement of the work orders is fundamental to that problem.听 What we鈥檙e also seeing is that inadequate and poor maintenance is, in the end, costing the city millions of dollars.鈥

Loose and falling bricks along the exterior of the building, a leaking roof with clear water damage, faulty HVAC systems in cold classrooms, backed up sewage, and unusable bathrooms across the school鈥檚 entire third floor are just a handful of what teachers and parents say some of the hazards at Whittier, located at 6201 5th St NW.

Alicia Bolton, whose two children attend Whittier, detailed a host of hazardous conditions at the school, adding that those issues were 鈥渟cratching the surface.鈥

Since the radiator incident, the most notable risk to school safety and public health has been a rat infestation, evidenced by droppings found scattered across school supplies and floors.

鈥淲e had a rodent issue,鈥 said Bolton. 鈥淚 think it’s been become more pronounced in the last few weeks, because I don’t know what city agencies [are] responsible for picking up the trash, but they haven’t done it in at least about three weeks or so.鈥

Bolton has both a third grader and a kindergartener at Whittier Elementary. Her daughter had told her one day that there had been a dead rat in the middle of her third-grade classroom, which her teacher had to dispose of before starting class.

鈥淭hat is that is disgusting,鈥 Bolton said. 鈥淚t is atrocious, and the city should be ashamed of itself.鈥

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, , by coming into contact with or 鈥渂reathing in air contaminated with fresh mouse or rat urine, droppings, or nesting materials from an infected rodent.鈥

Bolton noted numerous delayed repairs and construction, including an elevator that is currently not working and causes 鈥渕ajor concerns for safety,鈥 as well as a 鈥渕ore blatant violation of the law with respect to students with disabilities who can’t get around.鈥

A student who recently required crutches had to be carried upstairs by a teacher, sometimes multiple times a day, to get to and from class, Bolton said.

Anderson said that parents are not just upset about building code violations orrepairs, alone. “We are talking about violations that are illegal, illegal.”

The stench of backed up sewage, mold and mildew has made some classrooms unusable, leading teachers to use the lunchroom or other rooms to hold their classes, Bolton said.

鈥淭hose are the types of egregious issues that that we’ve been facing,鈥 Bolton said.

Rat droppings are littered across school supplies and classroom floors at Whittier Elementary. Photo credit: Whittier Elementary PTO

Bolton and other members from the Whittier Parent Teacher Organization have reached out to Chancellor Lewis Ferebee of DCPS and said that the response has 鈥渏ust been pretty lackluster,鈥 assuring parents that the school will be modernized in a few years.

Bolten said that schools like Whittier are 鈥渕ade up primarily of working-class families鈥 and feels that schools attended by more affluent families would not be left in such a state of disrepair.

鈥淎nd yet they expect us to believe that equity matters, and they care about our learners? I don’t think so. That’s not been proven to us.鈥

Bolton said that the system is 鈥渇lawed, and it needs to be redone鈥 and argued that the city鈥檚 , which uses a particular methodology to prioritize modernization across schools in the district, is 鈥渋neffective鈥.

Local ANC commissioners like Jocelynn Johnson and Janeese Lewis George have been responsive to parents and teachers at Whittier, decrying the state of public schools in the district.

Johnson has been an outspoken advocate for modernizing D.C. public schools like Whittier Elementary and has been appalled by what she considers to be the apparent lack of concern by DCPS officials and the city government.

鈥淚 started getting flooded with a lot of emails going to DCPS and to the mayor’s office, and after the parent would talk about the horrible things that they talked about 鈥 about not having any ramp to go and get into the building, you know, in 2022; bathrooms that haven鈥檛 been accessible along the floor; to ceiling leaking in the building and stuff like that,鈥 Johnson said.

Whittier Elementary’s roof is leaking, and mold and mildew have been reported by parents. Photo credit: Whittier Elementary PTO

Whittier Elementary’s building has loose and falling bricks in the early education area, where pre-schoolers enter the building. Photo credit: Whittier Elementary PTO

In an email sent to ANC Commissioner Erin Palmer regarding a proposed resolution 鈥淐alling for Urgent School Building Repairs at Whittier Elementary School and Legislative Changes to Ensure Timely School Modernizations,鈥 Deputy Mayor for Education Paul Kihn wrote that he does 鈥渞ecognize that there is ongoing preventative maintenance work and building condition work that needs to be done.鈥

Kihn wrote that the 鈥渇ull modernization of Whittier Elementary is scheduled to begin in the 2024-2025 school year鈥 and that it 鈥渋s scheduled to be completed by school year 2027.鈥

鈥淭his timeline was determined by criteria in the PACE Act (another subject of your resolution).听 We will continue to look at this timeline and take into account the feedback we are receiving from the community.鈥

But Johnson does not find this response reassuring.

鈥淭hat’s not acceptable. Are you kidding me?鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淪omebody鈥檚 going to get sick, and I don鈥檛 want to see that happen.鈥

Lalini Pedris

1 comment

  • This article captures the essence of the sorry state of this Ward 4 Elementary School! It by no means is up to the same level or standard of the Shepherd school, also located in Ward 4 where many of the DC government officials live and send their children to school!

    The Whittier parents have sent any number of emails AND PICTURES of Whittier to DCPS, DGS and to Mayor Bowsers office this year, but all they have gotten is Happy Talk with few REAL fixes! They don’t even have an access RAMP in the front of the school! OMG!

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