MODESTO, Calif. June 18, 2009

Recession Impacts Schools and Students

Foreclosures Reduce Student Population, Closing Schools

  • Play CBS Video Video Recession Empties U.S. Schools

    Due to the ongoing financial slump, many families have been forced to move and relocate. Ben Tracy reports that many school districts have witnessed a mass exodus of students -- and tax revenue.

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(CBS)  With so many Americans losing their homes and moving away with their children, many school districts are faced with a new problem - empty desks. CBS News Correspondent Ben Tracy continues our series, CBS Reports: Children of the Recession.



Classes are out at Teel Middle School in Modesto, California.

This year students learned some very tough lessons.

"I heard one student saying that 'my mom lost her job and now we might live on the streets,'" says Rebeca Vazquez a 7th grader.

Rebeca now shares a 2-bedroom house - and one tiny bathroom - with 11 other relatives. Many of them recently lost their own homes.

Vazquez says, "They had nowhere else to go so they came here because they know room is available."

Vasquez says school is the one place she has been able to escape her problems.

"I can get away and forget about home and just come to school and do school work."

"Now that's changed?" asked Tracy.

Vasquez says, "yeah, because our school is closing."

After 57 years, it isn't just the last day of the school year. It's the last day for good. Classrooms have sat empty for years, used only for storage. There just aren't enough kids anymore.

In 2003, 1,261 students attended Teel Middle School. Now, it's 541. In just this school year alone, 77 more students left.

"You remember swarms of kids moving and now you wonder is everyone sick today? I mean, where they'd go," asks Principal Chris Schoeneman.

Modesto, California has been hit hard. It has the third highest rate of foreclosure filings in the country. When parents leave town to find work, their kids leave their schools.

Vazquez says, "My friend just left to Orange County. Her name is Melanie. She used to be in all my classes - now she's not."

Closing Teel Middle School will save the school district nearly $1,000,000 a year. Throughout California, 20,000 teachers have been laid off in the past two years. Florida has lost nearly 40,000 students since 2005. In Michigan, 29 Detroit schools are being shut down.

Eddie Solorio is an 8th grader. He's 14.

His dad just moved to San Jose for a new job, and Eddie plans to follow him this summer.

Tracy asks, "You're going to lose your house, how come?"

Soloria replies, "um, couldn't afford it no more."

The rest of the students will also be moving. They'll be split between two middle schools.

One is "Glick" their cross-town rival, built at the height of the housing bubble.

Both students are teachers didn't know if they'd be spilt from their friends.

"I don't know which teachers I'll be with. I don't know who my principal will be," says Maggie Costa, a teacher.

The last diplomas are handed out at Teel. As the final minutes of the final day tick away, things are already different.

"They want to a part of something at this age, and they're a part of Teel. Now that will be closing and so who can I be a part of?" asks Judi Rand a teacher.

Losing their second home may be the one lesson these students never forget.



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Add a Comment
by mary-miami July 16, 2009 6:13 PM EDT
The problem is not just creating jobs or making them accessible to the general population, what's very important is a livable wage. The minimum wage at a typical seven dollars an hour, is not enough.
We need to increase the minimum to no less than ten dollars an hour, so people won't have to ask for food stamps and can at least keep afloat paying their rents and bills. Most people are proud to work and don't want government help, but they don't have any choice.
Reply to this comment
by santos1466 July 10, 2009 7:01 AM EDT
People are going through what a lot of the poor have bin going through for years. You just have to cut back and do with out a lot of stuff you don't knead. When you have everything and look down on others, its hard to except that your now one of them. You will now see their all not bad people, life's just thrown them a curve. Its how we live life that make us GREAT people not what we have. God bless this great nation.
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by sean58z July 8, 2009 12:22 PM EDT
Ed Rendell cut education spending in the Commonwealth. He wants the money for state contracts to his People in Philadelphia. His wife, Federal Judge Marjorie Rendell protects Ed from state prosecution. Pennsylvanians should not tolerate Ed's pork barrel politics.
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by leslieandemidio July 5, 2009 5:36 PM EDT
What I want to know is how can I get involved in helping?
Reply to this comment
by EricSmith000 June 18, 2009 11:53 PM EDT
American worker replacement that has been ongoing for 20 years. Let's have a look at the figures from the State Department website today.
Visas that are used to place workers from abroad in professional positions include: H-1B, H-1B1, TN, E-3, L-1, and J-1.

Total visas issued in these categories from years 1989 through 2008: 7,053,656.

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/3/27/135839/256
Reply to this comment
by Grambagga June 18, 2009 8:14 PM EDT
People! This is not a new phenomena. The sad experiences that these children are going through today happened to my three sons in 1979-1980. I lost my home, my car, my furniture, my job,and my self-worth. All I had left were three precious sons. I understand the fears, the uncertainty, and the knowledge that I needed to take care of my boys. I worked 2 and sometimes 3 jobs. We moved into my mother's basement. Daily life was challenging. The boys were going to new schools and missing their long time friends.
It's now 30 years later. One son has a BA in Marketing and Communications. One son has a degree as an Environmental Engineer. One son is an Lawyer. They are all wonderful sons, husbands, fathers and men.
JUST COWBOY UP!!
Reply to this comment
by tautomer June 18, 2009 8:10 PM EDT
All those empty schools and Obama wants to build more! I guess it's good for all those union construction workers who voted for Obama. It doesn-t make much sense for those of us who have to pay for his grandiose plans.
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