Credited to: Talibdin “TD” El-Amin, Publisher
The Missouri State Board of Education’s decision to downgrade Saint Louis Public Schools (SLPS) to provisionally accredited should not be dismissed as just another bureaucratic label. It is a clear signal — and a call to action. What’s more, it reveals deep-seated failures in district governance, legislative priorities, and civic engagement that have gone unaddressed for far too long.
Let’s be honest: this didn’t happen overnight. SLPS has suffered from years of leadership instability, financial mismanagement, audit delays, transportation failures, and staff turnover. The firing of yet another superintendent last October — amid questions about spending — only reinforced what many already knew: this district lacks consistent, competent leadership.
Moving forward, district leaders must tackle three urgent tasks: hire and retain a credible superintendent with a long-term vision; get financial reporting and audits back on track; and fix the basic operations that are currently failing students, families, and educators. Without those foundations, no amount of incremental academic gains will restore full accreditation or public confidence.
But SLPS does not operate in a vacuum. In Jefferson City, where Republicans dominate both chambers of the legislature, urban school districts like ours often face resistance instead of support. Legislators may use this downgrade to justify tighter oversight, not increased investment. That would be a mistake. While the provisional status may not immediately impact funding, it does increase the political vulnerability of a district already under pressure.
This is where the people of St. Louis must step up. Because while the school board deserves its share of the blame, so do we — the voters.
For years, St. Louis has seen some of the lowest voter turnout in the country for school board elections. These are the very people deciding who leads SLPS, how money is spent, and whether accountability is enforced. Yet the average citizen barely pays attention. We cannot expect better results if we don’t participate in choosing who’s at the helm.
It’s time we recognize the school board for what it is: one of the most powerful and impactful elected bodies in our city. The next election shouldn’t be an afterthought — it should be front-page news.
Ultimately, this downgrade should serve as a wake-up call for more than just district leadership. It’s a reminder that public education is a public responsibility. If we want our children to succeed, we need more than better policies — we need more engaged citizens, committed board members, and state lawmakers who see education not as a liability, but as the foundation of our future.SLPS can recover. But it will take all of us — paying attention, showing up, and holding every level of leadership accountable.