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Donahue to Leave DOE - How does DSEA feel about it?

Anyone catch this tidbit from June's Personnel Report at the State Board of Education Meeting:

Emily Falcon, Director, Financial Reform Resources, resigned effective June 1, 2013.

Jim Lesko, Director, Early Development and Learning Resources, retiring effective June 30, 2013.

Diane Donahue, Special Assistant, Teacher Leader Effectiveness Unit, retiring effective September 30, 2013.
 
And so it seems that former DSEA president, Diane Donahue, is leaving DOE.  Donahue was appointed by former State Sec. of Education Lowery to her cavernous position in the Townsend building basement shortly after Lowery and team brought home a RTTT win for Delawareans.  Well, Freddy Krueger fans called it a "win."  

Good Luck, Diane, in your next endeavour, and whatever you do - Don't fall asleep!
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Only in Western New York: School Boards that make us go hmmmm...

  • When your school board spends hundreds of thousand of dollars in legal fees to obtain the name of an anonymous blogger
  • When your school board's attorney serves a cease and desist email addressed to "Concerned Hamburger"
  • When your school board actually subpeonas Google... yep, that Google... for the names of anonymous commenters because these commenters criticize the decisions and actions made in their capacity as locally elected officials. 
  • When your school board starts suing teachers and/or members of the public for 'secretly taping' executive school board meetings... How on earth this trio got access and camaras in the room is beyond me.
  • If you finding yourself opining that the locally elected gang is a school "BOAR" of 'thin-skinned autocrats lavishly spending other people’s money to try and silence their critics."
  • Your school board is given the opportunity to extract itself from a lawsuit that seeks to punish bloggers who express their constitutional right to free speech in a public manner and that same school BOAR votes down the motion 3-2.  Yes, now I understand why the bloggers at Hamburg Education Ethics blog call them the school BOAR/BORE.
  • Attribution belongs to  http://statelymcdanielmanor.wordpress.com/2013/05/10/the-chicago-way-transplanted-to-new-york/
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Bloggers Beware: They will pursue you with wasteful lawsuits...

and they will loose...

UPDATE:  Link to Blog In Question:  http://hamburgschoolethics.blogspot.com/  Yep, they take blogging to a whole new level up there...  Makes Kilroy's classy!


As this these folks in Western, NY found out the hard way:

Hamburg superintendent steps down

Updated: Thursday, 27 Jun 2013, 6:04 PM EDT
Published : Thursday, 27 Jun 2013, 6:04 PM EDT
HAMBURG, N.Y. (WIVB) - The superintendent of the Hamburg Central School District is stepping down....Achramovitch and the district had been pursuing a lawsuit to try and identify an anonymous blogger who was critical of him and the school board. A judge threw that lawsuit out...

Learn More Here:   http://www.wivb.com/dpp/news/erie/hamburg-superintendent-steps-down
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Judge Orders Ed-Reformer Paul Vallas Out of Connecticut Superindentency...

Paul Vallas,  a "superstar" in education reform (deform) in Chicago, Philadelphia, and New Orleans, has been ordered to vacate his latest superintendency in Bridgeport Connecticut because he fails to hold the state's certification as required by Conn. law. 

Vallas came into Bridgeport by way of that state's Education Commissioner Stefan Pryor and was welcomed with open arms by the city's mayor and formally hired by the district's school board.  Pryor and Vallas had previously worked together rebuilding the school system in Haiti.  Vallas has friends in lots of high places, but apparently not in Conn's adjudicate...

Vallas has been ordered to step down because he did not complete a state-mandated leadership program, the Connecticut Post reports.


The independent-study program, at the University of Connecticut's Neag School of Education, was created specially for Vallas. Connecticut's law requires superintendents to have a certification that Vallas, who was appointed by state education commissioner Stefan Pryor, had not obtained.
The Post reports that in arguments, the course was described to the judge as requiring between a week and ten days of work for Vallas. Vallas apparently got an A. Other superintendents in the state were required to take a 13-month course at the NEAG school. http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/District_Dossier/2013/06/conn_judge_paul_vallas_must_st.html
 On Monday, Bridgeport's school board voted to ask the state to waive some of the state's requirements for superintendent, the Post reports. But this decision overrides that vote.

The ruling comes after a lawsuit was filed regarding whether his credentials were compliant with the law. Conn's teachers union had previously filed complaints with Pryor over whether or not Vallas was violating other state laws that required him to seek imput from constituencies such as teachers and parents.  Earlier this month, Pryor dismissed those complaints claiming that the union had not attempted to solve the program through the local board and thus did not yet rise to his jurisdiction.  Vallas has also been criticized because he supports privatizing education.

Meanwhile, supporters are citing a lack of longitudinal data as the reason they can't say whether or not Vallas time in the Conn district has been beneficial. 

And all of this matters to us in Delaware b/c Vallas was one of the players behind Chicago's ed reform efforts that became the road map for Race to the Top and the reform models that the PZ school's were forced to implement upon being named failed schools. 

It's likely that Vallas and team will appeal today's ruling.

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School Nutrition Update - New Rules for Vending Machine for 2014-15

From Edweek:  http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/rulesforengagement/2013/06/rules_for_school_vending_machines_snacks_unveiled.html


UPDATED
Long-awaited rules that regulate the fat, salt, sugar, and calories in snacks and vending machine foods sold in schools were finally released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture today.
The rules take effect during the 2014-15 school year. Nutrition advocates have been pressing the USDA to issue the rules this month. Any later, and they wouldn't have taken effect until the 2015-16 school year.
The new rules are the first update to school snack regulations since the 1970s. The existing rules only limited "foods of minimal nutritional value," which didn't keep candy bars, snack cakes, and sugary, vitamin-fortified sports drinks, from being regulated, said Margo Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest.
Despite some high hopes for the rules, which come on the heels of strict rules for school lunches, they won't completely wipe out sodas, chips, or sweets from schools. But they will make a dent.
 
Some specifics:
  • All snacks and vending machine foods must be either a fruit, a vegetable, a dairy product, a protein food, whole-grain-rich or a combination food that includes at least a quarter cup of fruits or vegetables.
  • For the first two years after the standards take effect, foods qualify if the items contain at least 10 percent of a nutrient designated as public health concern for children. These include calcium, potassium, vitamin D, and fiber. That means after two years, items fortified with these nutrients won't be allowed, Wootan said. "Companies won't be able to just fortify snacks with cheap nutrients to qualify them as healthy; all school foods will have to contain food―some fruit, vegetables, whole grains, or another healthy food component," she said.
  • Any snack or side dish would be limited to 200 calories. Entrées sold individually would be limited to 350 calories.
  • Snacks could have no more than 230 milligrams of sodium, and that cap would drop to 200 milligrams of sodium for the 2016-17 school year. Entrée items must have no more than 480 milligrams of sodium, unless these items are already part of regular school meals.
  • Items can get no more than 35 percent of their calories from fat and no more than 10 percent of their calories from saturated fat. Trans fats are banned. There are exceptions to the fat limits on some items, such as reduced-fat cheeses and nuts.
  • Total sugar must be no more than 35 percent by weight, with exemptions for dried fruits or vegetables.
  • Items sold as entrees in school lunches wouldn't have to meet these rules—which was a concern for some school nutrition advocates.
  • All schools can sell water, carbonated water, plain low-fat milk, flavored or unflavored fat-free milk and soy milk, and juices made only of fruits and vegetables.
  • High schools can sell all of those drinks as well as caffeinated sodas as large as 12 ounces, but they cannot have more than 60 calories. Full-calorie sports drinks won't be allowed. They can also sell flavored and carbonated water as long as these items have less than five calories per eight-ounce serving.
  • After reviewing comments the USDA decided it won't allow side dishes, such as french fries or chips served as part of a regular school meal, to be sold a la carte unless they meet all of the requirements listed here.
  • As originally proposed, the standards wouldn't apply to occasional school fund raising events or during evening and afterschool activities. States get to decide what that means.

What happens if schools don't comply? Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said he hopes schools do, though there aren't explicit penalties if they don't, unlike rules for the school lunch and breakfast programs.
"It's not about carrots and sticks," Vilsack said, then paused. "Well I guess it is about carrots."


Can you hear the chorus of high schools belly ach'n?  Read the rest of the story here at edweek.org.
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Update - HB 165 Passes the Senate, heads to Gov. for Signature

Current Status: Senate Passed   On   06/25/2013 04:47:25 PM

The Bill was passed by the Senate without any Senate amendments and will go to the Gov. for signature - some say as early as today!

Sen. Townsend responded with SB 147 and 148 which also cleared the Senate.  These bills should now head to the House...

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Will HB 165 move through the Senate this week?

HB 165 w/HA 3-(SA 1,SA 2,SA 4,SA 3) (F/N) 

Is on the Senate Agenda, Item #4 on the schedule released yesterday.  

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Are Teachers 'At the Table' Or 'On the Menu'? Hard to Tell.

Are Teachers 'At the Table' Or 'On the Menu'? Hard to Tell. 

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/teaching_now/2013/06/are_teachers_at_the_table_or_on_the_menu_hard_to_tell.html?cmp=ENL-EU-NEWS2

For better or worse, the message was clear that teacher engagement works within bounds, much like a managed classroom. Less clear, though, was to whom the message was directed—it seemed better suited to district- and state-level administrators than the teacher-led organizations in the room.
It was not until the sole teacher on the panel—Anthony Mullen, 2009 National Teacher of the Year and former blogger for Education Week Teacher—took the floor that the specifics of what teachers are contributing to these policy conversations were broached. When Coggins asked how he'd been involved in policy, he said, "I've had very few opportunities to affect policy, both on the state and national level. I've repeatedly asked the state superintendent to meet with me and he has declined." The answer was clearly not what the moderator had expected. (Mullen later told me he knew little about the event before he got there and thought he'd be promoting a book, which he did not receive in time to read, on teacher leadership.)

How Many Delaware Teachers Can Tell a Similar Story?  I bet Mike O. can!
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6/11/13 CSD Board Passes Resolution in Opposition of HB 165

The following resolution was authored by board member, John Young, and passed 4-0 with 2 members absent, and one board seat vacant.

On behalf of Dr. Freeman Williams, Superintendent Christina School District


Dear Delaware Legislators:

Greeting from the Christina School District!

As the largest school district in Delaware and administrator of 2 statewide 
programs, I would like to pass along that the Christina School District Board of 
Education unanimously passed a resolution on 6/11/13 opposing HB 165.

The Resolution reads:

Whereas the Delaware Legislature is currently considering HB 165, and act to 
amend Delaware Charter Law under Title 14 Chapter 5,
and Whereas the proposed law was crafted by a public body that took no notes nor 
published public minutes,
and Whereas the proposed bill establishes a performance fund for 8% of 
Delaware's students while providing no similar funding for the 92% attending 
traditional public schools,
and Whereas the proposed bill would allow unilateral authority to the DEDOE to 
move local funds to a charter school without due process,
and Whereas the proposed bill uses an unproven framework to hold charter schools 
accountable,
and Whereas the DOE has had significant difficulty in holding charter schools 
accountable in the recent past,
We the undersigned urge our local elected representatives to strongly consider a 
vote against HB 165 in the 147 Legislative session and to seek broader and more 
comprehensive input for any replacement bill in the future.

While one of the concerns was amended, the rest remain. I wanted to share this 
on behalf of my Board and district as you consider this extremely important bill 
next Tuesday.  If you have any concerns, questions or thoughts to share, please 
do not hesitate to contact me.


Sincerely,


Dr. Freeman L. Williams.
Superintendent- Christina School District
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Charter School Consolidation!

So - here's one for you:

With three new charter schools coming into Delaware's edusphere, let's talk charter school consolidation.  The three schools approved yesterday will collectively serve 700 students.  Each new school requires back office support such as Finance and HR folks.

3 New Charters + 24 Operating or Expected to Open 2014 = 27 Finance Directors and 27 HR Specialists.

That's 54 back office staffers!

The traditional districts operate far more schools with far fewer finance and hr staff members.  Yet, they get the heat for being the most top-heavy!

Is it time to consolidate Charters into a real "Charter District" with bulk back office support to meet finance and hr needs? Surely that would result in fewer than 54 employees!

It just may be!

Category: 4 comments

HB 165 hasn't made it to the Senate the Ready List - But it's coming - amendments and all for a final showdown...

Senate Places 4 Amendments with HB 165


Amendment 1 - Placed with bill
AMEND House Bill No. 165 as amended by deleting line 83 in its entirety and substituting in lieu thereof the following: “The fund shall be subject to appropriation and shall not exceed $5 million annually.  The Department of Education shall publish on its website the threshold eligibility requirements, the criteria for evaluation of applications, the names of successful applicants, the applications of successful applicants, and the amount awarded to each successful applicant.

Amendment 2 - Placed with bill
AMEND House Bill No. 165 as amended by deleting lines 306 through 309 in their entirety and substituting in lieu thereof the following:
“annual report for the school year ending the previous June, which shall: (1) discuss the school's progress in meeting overall student performance goals and standards; (2) discuss the innovation occurring at the charter school, including but not limited to the areas of curriculum development, instruction, student culture and discipline, community and parental involvement, teacher and staff development, school operations and management, and extracurricular and after-school programming; and (3) contain a financial statement setting forth by appropriate categories the school's revenues and expenditures and assets and liabilities.  Each charter school seeking renewal of its charter shall produce an annual report subject to these same requirements, on or before September 30.  The approving authority may, in its discretion and for good cause.
FURTHER AMEND House Bill No. 165 as amended by inserting between lines 425 and 426 the following and renumber the remaining Sections accordingly:
“Section 10. Amend Title 14 of the Delaware Code § 514 by making insertions as shown by underlining:
§ 514. State reports on the charter school program.
Annually, the Department shall prepare a report for the Governor and the General Assembly on the success or failure of charter schools and propose changes in state law necessary to improve or change the charter school program. Such report shall contain a section comparing the per student expenditures of charter schools, considering all sources of such expenditures, with those of other public schools.  Such report shall also contain: (1) the Secretary of Education's analysis of, recommendations relating to, and proposed changes relating to Delaware education laws, in light of the content of annual reports submitted pursuant to Section 513 of Title 14; and (2) the Secretary's assessment of specific opportunities and barriers relating to the implementation of charters schools' innovations in the broader Delaware public education school system.

Amendment 3 - Placed with Bill
Amend House Bill No. 165 as amended by deleting line 77 in its entirety and substituting in lieu thereof the following:
“applicants desiring to apply for funding, which shall include but not be limited to: (1) an overall student body population in which low-income students comprise at least 10% of the student body, and (2) a proven track record of success, as” 

Amendment 4 - Placed with Bill

AMEND House Bill No. 165 as amended by deleting lines 296 and 297 in their entirety and substituting in lieu thereof the following:
“(15) The school shall have a satisfactory plan to ensure the effectiveness of its board of trustees, including governance trainings conducted for any new board members and at a minimum of once every three years.  Such governance trainings shall meet minimum content standards established by the Department of Education and published on the Department's website, and shall be attended by a representative of the Department; and”

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Kavips Nails It - Why Locally-Grown Charters Might Want to Be Wary of HB 165

We've said it before, and we'll say it again - We're pro-charter with a purpose.  We're also pro-great legislation that works for all kids.  HB 165 is NOT great legislation - it's not even good... And it's not some marvelous compromise bill - it's weak, biased, and filled with gaps that will allow for funding and policy to be politically manipulated by the hands that don't belong in the pot.

Shout out to Kavips for offering a thoughtful discourse on the impact of HB 165 on locally-grown Delaware charter start-ups.  See, there's a charter upside to this bill - but there's also a charter downside...

From Kavips:  More at: http://kavips.wordpress.com/2013/06/19/free-building-funds-for-charters-the-other-side-of-the-story/
We often talk of charter versus public.  We’ve never even once talked about new charter schools wiping out existing charter schools.   It would be one thing if the new charter conglomerate were to do so, with the expense of loan repayments at least evening out the playing field for the small school competing with it.  But to give the big megalithic charter a free building, free start up costs, all out of taxpayers dollars when there are banks lined up to loan money,… is simply unfair.
The referee (Markell, Rodel, DOE, charter lobbyists, Jacques) in the match, is blowing the whistle for only one side…
This though unfair, happens a lot in government.  Quite often laws are put in place by who you know, and how much you get for your vote.  The only way justice gets done, is when those with a backbone of courage, step up and say “no”…
9 did in the House and 31 didn’t.  But we know far less about the damage this bill would do then, than we do now.
It is a terrible state of affairs when a legislator will give a corporate megalith the  unfair advantage  over a religious or non-profit organization.  It is sickening … really.
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SB 100 is heading to the Governor to be signed into law!

Senate Bill 100, a bill to restrict the use of seclusion and restraint in public 
schools has PASSED the House and heads to the governor for signature! 
 
 http://legis.delaware.gov/LIS/LIS147.NSF/vwLegislation/BAFA8D86E911FD3885257B60004BE962?Opendocument
 
Primary Sponsor: Sokola Additional Sponsor(s):    Rep. Q. Johnson
CoSponsors: Sens. Lawson, Lopez, Poore, Townsend; Reps. Heffernan, Longhurst, Scott, M. Smith
Introduced on : 06/04/2013
Long Title:AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 14 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO USE OF SECLUSION AND RESTRAINT IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
Synopsis:Based on national reports documenting misuse of seclusion and restraint within public schools, many states are adopting remedial statutory or regulatory standards. In 2012, the U.S. Department of Education issued authoritative guidance encouraging states to adopt written standards deterring use of seclusion and restraint in public schools. This bill is the product of research and deliberations of an interagency committee formed by the Governor’s Advisory Council for Exceptional Citizens (GACEC) to identify best practices and develop standards for Delaware public schools.

Current Status: House Passed   On   06/19/2013 05:21:05 PM
 
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Bancroft Elementary School in Line for a Cool New Addition - doesn't cost DE tax payers a dime, either

I'd like to go backwards to a time when schools were the heart of a community - a status that was slowly eroding during my own childhood.  And that's why I am so excited by an awesome new addition coming to Bancroft Elementary School in the Christina School District.   In reality, we know our schools have always worked to be the heart of their communities, while silmutanteously losing ground  (and receiving far less funding and acknowledgement than they have certainly earned) during an explosion of poverty, re-seg, and politicking. 

And that's why I am thrilled for Bancroft and our CSD children served therein and nearby:


FITNESS CENTERS COMING TO 3 DELAWARE SCHOOLS

The gyms will be different for each school. At Bancroft, students will have traditional cardio equipment but also Nintendo Wiis and “Dance Dance Revolution” consoles, video games where students move their bodies to play. At A.I and McCullough, the gyms will include cardio machines, such as stationary bikes, and weightlifting equipment.
To earn the gyms, schools had to submit applications to the foundations detailing their fitness and nutrition efforts. A panel then determined which campuses should receive the gyms.
The group rewards schools in four states every year, putting gyms in three schools in each state.    More here: www.delawareonline.com/article/20130616/NEWS/306160028/Fitness-centers-coming-3-Delaware-schools
That's right, Bancroft and two other Delaware schools are about to be the recipients of $100,000 fitness centers - each!  And these are not your run-of-the-mill gyms - the fitness centers are both health and sensory-oriented and planned with a "hook" that will entice our children to enjoy exercise, and reward them for work well-done, even when it's anything but a preferential task!

Go Bancroft!

And on a separate note - if our business community wants to learn how they can be an asset to education rather than a dictator - endeavours such as the one above are additive to education rather than demoralizing to the communities. And this is precisely where Jack, Rodel, and Company should put their billions - into initiatives that turn students, parents, teachers, and communities on to education. 
Category: 1 comments

Reblogged: Delaware Libertarian: Markell creates private working group to execute puppies

I love a good piece of sarcastic reality.  Visit Delaware Libertarian for the full post:   http://delawarelibertarian.blogspot.com/2013/06/governor-markell-creates-private.html
What will be the legacies of the Markell administration in Delaware?

Wow, there are so many to choose from:

The tax dollars invested squandered on Fisker and Bloom Energy.

The new hospital to be built after Markell did not like the decision of the regulatory board and simply replaced it with new toadies who would do what he wanted.

The "not a public body" charter school work group that created HB 165 (with Pistol Pete Schwarzkopf following instructions to the letter and not even allowing comment on the illegalities during legislative debate).

Race to the Top and all the massive advances in Delaware public education, especially for children in Wilmington.  Not.

Removing SROs from the budget while simultaneously ballooning the budget of the Office of the Secretary of Safety and Homeland Security.

Never proposing a raise for state employees.

$80 million of last-minute regressive taxes proposed in the last three weeks of a General Assembly session after cutting taxes on the wealthy a few months earlier.

I'm sure you have your favorite Markell moment that I've omitted (there have been so many).
http://delawarelibertarian.blogspot.com/2013/06/governor-markell-creates-private.html


Democratic caucus?  There's a real laugher these days.

Meanwhile, Governor Markell's secret work group on excess puppies has reported (and his private council has agreed) that it would improve his chances of becoming US Secretary of Education to be seen executing strays on WDDE. 

http://delawarelibertarian.blogspot.com/2013/06/governor-markell-creates-private.html
Category: 1 comments

Cups!


Category: 0 comments

Reblogged: Kavips: What we learned...

Everyone is tired, myself included, so briefly here it goes….
A)  We learned we are right.  You say “How?  We lost”.  Yes for now, but we now erase the doubt we might have had that we couldn’t make any difference. We did. We did not lose 21 to 0 as we did in the Senate on SB 51. We gained 6 converts in the House since SB 51 passed there   There is  far more fired up opposition than before… Here is what is important. Everyone… whether its been on blogs, through emails, or one on ones, whom we’ve engaged has come around to our way of thinking.   The other side knows this. That’s the reason for the rush, That’s the reason for the secrecy. That’s the reason there was no debate on any education bill, until we parents pushed it!..  Bottom line is we are gaining numbers; they are losing numbers.  Something of which we should all be extremely proud!

More Here:  http://kavips.wordpress.com/
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REBLOGGED FROM TRANSPARENT CHRISTINA - Let's talk about the fruit of the forbidden tree principle...

Hey, Earl, HB 165 was properly-vetted, huh?  By the Gov's appointed working group?  The one that violated FOIA? That one? Yeah...

If you can't create legislation in the light of day, that legislation doesn't deserve to see the light of day.  HB 165 needs to visit the speaker's desk drawer.  
 
Based on the information you provided and our review, the Working Group may be a “public body” within the meaning of FOIA.  29 Del. C. § 10002.  If that is the case, the Working Group was (and, if still active, remains) subject to the “open meeting” provisions of the Act.  See generally 29 Del. C. § 10004.  Thus, any prior meetings conducted without adequate public notice or compliance with other open meeting requirements may have been held in violation of the Act.  We note however that, as a practical matter, there may be no effective way to remediate any such violations.  According to your email below, the Working Group has already made its recommendation to legislators.  http://transparentchristina.wordpress.com/2013/06/10/hb-165-foia-bomb-rep-williams-gets-her-foia-answer-rep-jaques-d-rodel-are-you-paying-attention-rep-darryl-scott-d-rodel-what-do-you-think-of-them-apples-netde/

Ever heard of Fruit of the Forbidden Tree?  Apply the principle to HB 165.

Thanks, Rep. Williams for ferreting out the truth amidst the lies.
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HB 165 - It's FOUND MONEY - Just ask Earl...

Last week, I sent Earl Jacques, my representative and HB 165 sponsor an email that shared my concerns around charter school law reform.  As you all know, I am a middle of the road advocate on the issue of charter reform and funding. I have child in a Delaware charter school and another in a traditional public school.   I'm a choice parent and a feeder parent. I walk in both worlds - the utilization of choice allows me to seek placements that meet both his and her needs.  Yes, I'm part of a minority - the majority of which chooses to stay out of the political fray and pray their children are receiving the best education possible - a quiet minority that neither lobbying side has attempted to court.

Earl's response demanded a volley, so I wrote him back.  His 2nd response, well, I'll let you read it for yourself...and draw your own conclusions.

My letter - short version:

My message, Earl, is that as these reforms are brought forth in Dover, as attempts are made to even the playing field between charters and traditional public schools, safeguards must remain in place.  I implore you to reconsider some of the legislation as proposed and provide amendments to protect education funding:

1. Any new streams of funding or methods of obtaining capital funding should be restricted to charters that own their own facilities or lease facilities that are state or school district owned.   This will compel charters that are establishing themselves or growing to consider the state's excess property list for their facility plans.  It will ultimately help address a growing problem:  a future glut of under-populated district school buildings by encouraging districts and charters to work together to serve the same student populations.  You see, as more students leave traditional schools, we are creating capacity in these buildings, yet our operation costs will not decrease.  It will cost the same to operate a building with 500 students as it will to operate that same school with 300 students. The facility operational needs will not change - water, electricity, sewer, those will remain the same.  But, the funds won't be there b/c they will follow the 200 who have left for charter.

In reality, if CSD were to close a traditional high school today, we would have capacity to serve the affected students in our other two high schools.  Reality. The flip side - CSD will never be permitted to close a neighborhood school - our neighborhood schools are the result of a failed attempt to close schools in the City of Wilmington under Lillian Lowery's leadership years ago.  Lowery went to court and lost. This legal precedent will hurt any traditional school district that attempts to close a school regardless of the population serve.

It is these future considerations that need to be addressed along with parity for charter funding in today's legislation.  And I am sad that I don't see this happening. We simply cannot afford to paralyze districts in order to create parity w/o safeguards. 

2. Somewhere in the glut of bills and amendments, there must be a transparency bill.  It is paramount that all schools adopt transparency and accountability best practices - this means recording their school board/board of directors meetings and making that content available on their websites.  If a slush fund is to be established, let it be required that a charter must first utilize funds from this new pot to establish these absolute best practices before it can tap these funds for other expenses/projects. 

In the absence of this best practice - are you willing to attend every charter board meeting of every charter board that wishes to utilize these funds and provide a report back to your constituents on a consistent basis regarding the fund usage?  I'll hazard to guess that you haven't the time.  Nor do the majority of your constituents - myself included.  There is a bridge to overcoming this capacity gap - mandatory recordings and publication.  And this new fund now provides charters with access to new funding to achieve this safeguard.

In closing, I sincerely hope that you will consider my email, my thoughts as a parent in two different worlds, both designed to prepare my children for a successful future. You sir are charged with a very precarious task - balancing the needs of students with the demands of the tax payers. Find the balance, re-establish the safeguards.

Sincerely,


Elizabeth Scheinberg
tax payer

Rep. Jacques Response #1: (Color, Bold, and Underline by C&E 1st)
 -----Original Message-----
From: Jaques, Jr, Earl (LegHall), Earl (LegHall) <Earl.Jaques@state.de.us>
To: montagnebeau <montagnebeau@aol.com>
Sent: Thu, Jun 6, 2013 10:18 am
Subject: RE: Charter Thoughts


Elizabeth,
First the fund you are referring to is not a "slush" fund.  If you attended yesterday's public meeting you would know that it is not used for capital projects.  It is connected to the Charter Performance framework, which will ensure that is used for education issues for either high-performing or high-need students. The money allocated came from the last budget numbers - NOT from the Department of Education.  So this isn't a case of taking money away from our public schools.  In fact, the number one priority, according to the testimony from the School Superintendents to the Joint Finance Committee was money for technology.  That money is in the budget!  The Charter's number one priority was money for this Strategic Performance Fund, which again the Joint Finance Committee granted and is in the budget based on whether the legislation passes.  Since it doesn't apply, I shouldn't comment.  However, the points you make in the first few paragraphs are done each and every year for our Colleges and Universities.  We give them capital money and we don't own the buildings.  If you took the time to read House Bill 165 you would see loads of transparency and accountability throughout.  I hope you are not listen to the nay Sayers who just like to yell at the top of their voice, but most of the time don't know what they are talking about!   HB 165 has been properly vetted and has loads of support throughout the education community.
                                                            Earl

 The Volley - My 2nd Email:

Earl,

I'm surprised by your tone.  I spoke generally of charter reform and the longitudinal impact that necessitates thoughtful approach.  I did not cite any bill by number, but did reference the slush fund.  I'm pleased that you noted my absence from yesterday's hearing.  As a legislator whose district encompasses parts of CSD, I am certain that you are reticent that you have missed all three comprehensive CSD graduations.  While the hearing was being conducted in Dover, I was caring for my severely disabled daughter while preparing for my third graduation ceremony of the week - Christiana High School.  Let me use this opportunity to invite you to the remaining graduations: 

Delaware Autism Program today at 4 pm, Kirk Middle School
Delaware School for the Deaf today at 7 pm, DSD on Rt 4
Groves Adult High School Graduation, Friday at 7:30 pm at Glasgow High School

I will share that is relief to hear that this is new-found funding. I do wonder of course, how do we sustain one-time new-found funding in subsequent years? However, I am relieved to hear that you will be advocating across the board for the restoration of funds previously hi-jacked by our Gov and re-allocated to our General Fund by our legislators.

Specifically to HB 165, the well-vetted bill, the following clause concerns me greatly:

(m) The Department of Education shall administer a performance fund for charter schools, to be known as the “Charter School Performance Fund”.  The Department of Education shall establish threshold eligibility requirements for applicants desiring to apply for funding, which shall include but not be limited to a proven track record of success, as measured by a Performance Framework established by the charter school’s authorizer or comparable measures as defined by the Department. The Department of Education shall also establish criteria to evaluate applications for funding, which shall include but not be limited to the availability of supplemental funding from non-State sources at a ratio to be determined by the Department.  The Department of Education shall prioritize those applications from applicants that have (a) developed high-quality plans for start-up or expansion or (b) serve high-need students, as defined by the Department.  The fund shall be subject to appropriation and shall not exceed $5 million annually.

The statement is a generality at best. It does not provide clarity around what can or cannot be funded, nor offer any precision of the eligibility of schools.  If applicants must have a proven track record of success, then the bill precludes any new or young schools from eligibility.  "Measures as defined by the Department" is very obscure, as is the "availability of supplemental funding from non-State sources."  Nor does this bill define a "high quality plan for start-up or expansion." 

I don't see the accountability or transparency pertaining to these funds.  The fact is that plans are wonderful things, they provide direction.  But, if the leadership is incompetent, and we often don't know that until the plans begin to fall apart, then the plan is just a piece a paper. 

For me, this portion of the bill is simply too weak, too easy to take advantage of, and too susceptible to political persuasion.

And I no, I don't tend to listen to the nay-sayers.  If anything, I'm in the political middle where charters are concerned.  However, that does not mean that I will abdicate my responsibilities as an education advocate.

I'm just saddened that you don't seem to value my contributions.

Sincerely,


Elizabeth
Rep. Earl Jacques 2nd Response:

NOTHING, NONE, 
NOT AN IOTA OF A RESPONSE

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CHS Class of 2013


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GHS Class of 2013


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Across Our State - Our Paras are Fighting for their Jobs? What's our Gov. Fighting for?

A Charter School Slush Fund.


http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20130604/NEWS/306040062/School-disctrict-paraprofessionals-fight-their-job-survival?nclick_check=1

“If we had the funding level we had in 2008, these cuts would not be necessary. Period,” Ackerman said. “If I were sitting where you are, I’d be very angry about what the state is spending money on right now.”

Doesn't Ackerman know that in 2008, the nation was headlong into a recession?  He couldn't possibly be telling us that public education in Delaware fared better during the recession than it is during the Recovery?  Or that today's education finance problems stem from the decisions made by the Gov who was elected in 2008? 

Nah, couldn't be. 

Markell's the education governor.  There's no way that the EDUCATION GOVERNOR would have ever balanced the state's budgets on the backs of our children.  No freak'n way!
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Christina Commencements Begin!


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