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Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup for July
26, 2014:
An out-of-the-box solution to
Pennsylvania ’s
$50 billion retirement system debt
Basic education funding
commission to focus on fairness and restoring trust
PLSReporter Author: Jason
Gottesman/Thursday, July 24, 2014/Categories: News
and Views
The Basic Education Funding Commission established under Act 51
of 2014 held its first meeting Thursday with an eye toward focusing its work on
establishing a fair and trustworthy basic education funding formula. Commission Co-Chairman Sen. Pat Browne
(R-Lehigh) stated the work of the commission will be of “tremendous importance
to the overall work of state government.”
He added the General Assembly owes the people of Pennsylvania the recognition that education
dollars come from all corners of the commonwealth and should be distributed
fairly. He also stressed the
importance of recognizing that funding basic education is a constitutional
obligation that needs to be fulfilled by providing for a system of public
education that adequately provides for the education of Pennsylvania ’s children.
“It’s a very important role, a difficult role, but if we have
the opportunity to work together and include all interested parties across the
commonwealth in our conversations and our work, I believe we will be
successful,” he told the commission.
Basic Education Funding
Commission appoints co-chairs, sets Aug.20 meeting date.
Capitolwire.com — Under The Dome™ Friday, July 25, 2014
The Basic Education Funding Commission held its inaugural
meeting Thursday at the state capitol, where the 15 members discussed the
intention of the commission and elected Sen. Pat Browne, R-Lehigh, and Rep.
Mike Vereb, R-Montgomery, as co-chairs. Also serving on the commission are
Senators Mike Folmer, R-Lebanon, Lloyd Smucker, R-Lancaster, Rob Teplitz,
D-Dauphin, Andrew Dinniman, D-Chester, and Matt Smith, D-Allegheny;
Representatives James Roebuck, D-Philadelphia, Mike Sturla, D-Lancaster, Paul
Clymer, R-Bucks, Donna Oberlander, R-Clarion, Mark Longietti, D-Mercer; Budget
Secretary Charles Zogby, Department of Education Secretary Carolyn Dumaresq,
and Department of Education Deputy Secretary Nichole Duffy. During the meeting,
Clymer designated Rep. Bernie O'Neill, R-Bucks, as his representative to serve
on the commission. O'Neill, who sponsored House Bill 1738 — which created the
commission — said he kept the design of the bill “pretty much the same” as the
Special Education Funding Commission created last year, who's recommended
formula was written into the Fiscal Code earlier this month. He described the
intention of the commission as “very simple” — revamp the basic education
funding formula to “ensure fairness” and uphold the Legislature's
constitutional obligation. The commission will next meet on Aug. 20 at 11:30
a.m. in the North
Office Building ,
Senate Hearing Room 1 for a presentation by the Department of Education and the
House and Senate Appropriations committees.
Sturla pleased to be part of
Basic Education Funding Commission
PA House Democratic website July 24, 2014
"I look forward to working with co-chairmen Senator Pat
Browne and Representative Mike Vereb and the other appointees to this
commission," said Sturla, D-Lancaster. "I'm eager to begin the serious
discussion of an equitable funding formula that considers a variety of factors,
with the end product hopefully providing an efficient and high quality public
education for every student, no matter where they live in Pennsylvania . This is especially important
since the past four state budgets have not shown education to be a high
priority for the current administration."
Local legislators will play
role in reforming public school funding
One thing politicians, taxpayers and public education advocates
can agree on is that the funding system for schools is broken. But getting all those people to agree on how
to fix the system is the difficult part.
That’s why the state has set up a Basic Education Funding Commission.
The panel will study a new ways for distributing cash to the 500 school
districts in the commonwealth.
And two Lancaster
County lawmakers will
play a part in guiding the discussion. Sen. Lloyd Smucker and Rep. Mike Sturla will sit on the 15-member commission
that will recommend how Pennsylvania
should change how it funds public education. They got to work this week.
Mike Vereb named to Pa. education funding
commission
By Brendan Wills, The Times Herald POSTED: 07/24/14,
4:16 PM EDT
NORRISTOWN — During the first meeting Thursday of the new Basic
Education Funding Commission created to reform public education funding in Pennsylvania , State Rep.
Mike Vereb (R-150th Dist.) was selected to serve as co-chairman. “In a single word, this commission is about
fairness,” said Vereb in a press release. “I want to work to establish fairness
so that students in every area of Pennsylvania
have access to a quality education. I want to make sure schools in Montgomery County and everywhere else across the
commonwealth receive their fair share of funding. We recognize tax dollars are
a limited resource and our responsibility is to find the best way to use the
dollars that are available.”
Prior posting on the link between Rep. Vereb and Vahan Gureghian…
What Would Ronnie Say About
Montco Republicans Now?
BY PHILLYMAG | AUGUST
22, 2011
…..The way Gureghian’s charter
school in Chester
works, the school itself is public. It receives taxpayer money. But a private,
for-profit company—Gureghian’s Charter School Management Inc.—manages the
school’s finances. It owns the buildings, leases them to the school, pays the
teachers and, according to a 2008 report by the Inquirer, has
collected $60.6 million in public funds since the school was started in 1999.
Gureghian wanted to make sure the bill would exempt charter-school management
organizations like CSMI from state sunshine laws. According to Republican State
Representative Mike Vereb, who considers himself a friend of Gureghian, “The
language that Vahan was looking to do had to do with vendors of a school …
contractors.” The effect of such language would be to hide details of the
financial operations of charter schools from public scrutiny. Presumably, this
would make it harder for Gureghian’s competitors to copy his financial
“recipe.”
GUEST COLUMN: An
out-of-the-box solution to Pennsylvania ’s
$50 billion retirement system debt By Tim Potts
Author: The
PLS Reporter/Thursday, July 24, 2014
The problem with our school employees’ and state employees’
retirement systems is real, and it’s forcing school districts to raise property
taxes. The retirement systems have a
combined debt of nearly $50 billion. It’s a debt that must be paid, and it’s
increasing, some say, by $10 million per day. I serve on the Carlisle Area
School District board of
directors. I am among 4,500 school board members who are forced to raise
property taxes to pay our share of the debt. School districts must pay half of
retirement system costs, and the state pays half.
The share of property taxes our district pays toward pension
costs has risen 2,004 percent since Act 9 of 2001. That’s the law that set the
retirement systems’ death spiral in motion. Abetted by governors of both
parties, lawmakers raised benefits for retirees, then refused to put into the
system what they took out of it.
Calling the current pension systems "make believe,"
Rep. Mike Tobash, R-Schuylkill/Berks, met with York residents Thursday to talk about a
proposal for pension reform.
The new proposal, an amendment to House Bill 1353, would change
the pension system for all new state and public school employees. Instead of
staying under the current system, new employees would move to a hybrid plan
that would allow the employees to continue partially under the current system
but also be enrolled in a 401(k)-type plan.
The hybrid system is the first step toward reducing the
existing debt and limiting the amount of pension growth in future years, Tobash
said. If enacted, the plan is expected to save between $11 billion and $15
billion over a 30-year period.
Corbett’s education policies
faulted
Johnstown Tribune Democrat by Dave Sutor dsutor@tribdem.com July 23, 2014
— A former Pennsylvania
secretary of education graded Gov. Tom Corbett’s approach to education as
“inadequate” on Wednesday. Gerald
Zahorchak made his comment during an event in support of Tom Wolf, the
Democratic Party nominee in this year’s gubernatorial election, at the Holiday Inn
Johnstown-Downtown. “Too many kids are going to be hurting,” Zahorchak said. “We’ll pay for this long term when they go
into their 20s and 30s and 40s and 50 years of age and they’re not productive.”
"In Philadelphia 's
86-school charter system, there is at least $88 million in unassigned reserve
funds. For most schools in the state, reserve funds can't exceed 8 to 12
percent of a school's operating budget. That rule doesn't hold for
charters."
DN Editorial: Are we having fund yet?
DN Editorial: Are we having fund yet?
POSTED: Friday, July 25, 2014, 3:01 AM
WE CAN'T talk about the struggles of the Philadelphia School
District without taking aim at the inequities in
the state's approach to funding the schools throughout the state.
For one thing, the per-pupil allocations for Philadelphia are lower than many other
districts. Cuts made in basic education funding have often led to larger
per-pupil cuts to poorer districts like ours and smaller cuts to wealthier
districts. And a rational funding formula that would better account for the
economic realities of each district rather than a flat generic formula had only
a brief and shining moment before the Corbett administration abandoned it.
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/20140725_DN_Editorial__Are_we_having_fund_yet_.html#1xxzIAehQqLKY2D5.99
Open question: Records chief
frets over future
AMY WORDEN, INQUIRER
HARRISBURG
BUREAU LAST UPDATED: Friday, July 25, 2014, 1:08 AM
POSTED: Thursday, July 24, 2014, 6:47 PM
Dual Language eyes another
old Catholic school in Bethlehem
The South Side charter school is negotiations with the Allentown Diocese to use Seton
Academy in West Bethlehem while in
legal fight with Bethlehem
Area School
District .
By Steve Esack,
Call Harrisburg
Bureau 9:18 p.m. EDT, July 25, 2014
Computer Aid Inc. to open
private school after charter application rejected
By Adam Clark,
Of The Morning Call 9:18 p.m. EDT, July 25, 2014
Computer Aid Inc. isn't letting the Allentown School Board stop
it from opening its own school.
The South Whitehall Township computer
services company, which had its application for a technology-focused charter
school rejected in December, announced plans this week to launch a private
school, beginning with four full-day kindergarten classes this fall.
The CAI Learning Academy will open in the same location as the
charter school was proposed, 1033
W. Washington St. , a former Catholic school
building owned by the Allentown Diocese.
The company hasn't completely closed the door on opening a
charter school, but decided it could open a private school more quickly and
have more freedom than it would with a charter school, said Jessica Devlin, the
school's director.
The path forward: Q&A
with Chamber of Commerce's Rob Wonderling
the notebook By Bill
Hangley Jr. on Jul 25, 2014 01:08 PM
As president and CEO of the Greater Philadelphia Chamber of
Commerce, Rob Wonderling says that improving public education has become one of
his group’s “top priorities.”
Where the chamber once focused primarily on things like summer
internships and literacy programs, it is increasingly engaged with questions of
leadership and finance. Wonderling served on the search committee that brought
Superintendent William Hite to town. The chamber advised on the nomination and
confirmation of School Reform Commission members Feather Houstoun, Pedro Ramos,
Bill Green and Farah Jimenez. It has backed local property and sales tax
increases. This summer it advocated on behalf of the proposed cigarette tax.
And now, the chamber has joined a coalition that will advise on
a new funding formula. But unlike many, Wonderling is not convinced that the
District faces a fundamental problem of underfunding.
Instead, he sees the formula discussions as a chance to rethink
service delivery.
“You only get one shot to modernize core functions,” he says.
We asked Wonderling to share his thoughts on the business
community’s interest in education, the prospects for funding increases and
shale taxes, and the coming debates over what should be spent and how.
It cost $11.70 per hour to educate a child
in PA in the 201-2013 school year.
AN UNCOMMON VIEW OF HOW MUCH
IT COST TO EDUCATE A CHILD
Jean Jacques Crawb's Blog Posted on July 25, 2014by jeanjacquescrawb
There are so many critics of public education and its funding
throwing around the B word these days that I feel that I should be wearing a
pith helmet and chain mail. Once you utter the word (you should pardon the
expression) BILLION, the lights start to blink, the horns begin to honk and
fireworks can be seen close by. I am not
sure that most people can conceive of a billion anythings. If you saw the
movie, “Now you see me,” you saw a stack of 3 billion euros piled on a pallet.
In school finance parlance, we now have “experts” castigating schools and
school districts for spending billions upon billions of dollars. You know what
the next words are, “The amount of waste in education is (choose your
epithet).”
At institute, educators
explore what teacher leadership looks like
the notebook By Dale
Mezzacappa on Jul 25, 2014 03:40 PM
As the School District announced that it wanted teams of educators
and others to
submit plans for school overhaul, a group of young Philadelphia teachers was holding a summer
institute on teacher leadership. For three
days this week, 18 of them met under the auspices of Teachers Lead Philly on
the campus of Swarthmore College to discuss their challenges, draw from the
wisdom of veterans, tell their stories and work on skills including mentoring,
curriculum design, and writing for publication.
"The summer institute is rooted in the idea that we really believe
every teacher is a leader," said Kathleen Melville, a teacher at the Workshop School and communications director of
the group. "But not all teachers think of themselves as leaders."
Teachers Lead Philly is a network of practicing teachers who
seek to influence both classroom practice and public policy while promoting
teacher collaboration and the building of school communities.
Interview: Why Philly
Students Can’t Win on Standardized Tests
It’s the textbooks, says Meredith Broussard.
Philly Magazine BY JOEL MATHIS | JULY
24, 2014 AT 11:06 AM
Meredith Broussard, an assistant professor of journalism
at Temple
University’s school of media and communication, examines the performance of
Philadelphia
public school students in a new piece at TheAtlantic.com, “Why
Poor Schools Can’t Win at Standardized Testing.”
The answer, it turns out, is somewhat simple: The same
companies make textbooks and the standardized tests. But Philadelphia students largely don’t have
access to the textbooks that form the basis of their tests. Shockingly, she
reports, the district’s textbook budget for the recent school year was … zero
dollars per student.
University
of Pennsylvania Graduate School
of Education Research to Practice
The National Writing Project's
resources for teachers\Inspiring Students to Write
The Philadelphia Writing project
(PhilWP), a renowned local site of the National Writing Project, teaches
writing and literacy as critical tools for learning. Penn GSE professor Dianne
Waff works with teachers to move them and their students toward
writing-intensive lives that connect learning, high student achievement, and
personal growth. The following tips come
from experienced PhilWP Teacher Consultants (TCs), who offer ideas to encourage
students to write and develop a love for words and creative expression.
BATS DC
Rally July 28 10 am
The Badass Teachers Association (BATs), an activist
organization of over 50,000 teachers will be holding a rally in Washington D.C.
to protest the devastating educational policies of the United States Department
of Education and Arne Duncan. The Rally will be held on July 28,
2014 at the USDOE Plaza beginning at 10 a.m. and will draw thousands of
teachers, parents, students, and educational activists from around the
country. BATs will demand such things as ending federal incentives to
close and privatize schools, promote equity and adequate funding for all public
schools, and ban all data sharing of children’s private information.
Bucks Lehigh
EduSummit Monday Aug 11th and Tuesday Aug 12th
Location: Southern Lehigh High School5800 Main Street , Center Valley , PA
18034
Time: 8 AM - 3 PM Each Day(Registration starts at 7:30 AM. Keynote starts at 8:00 AM.)
Location: Southern Lehigh High School
Time: 8 AM - 3 PM Each Day(Registration starts at 7:30 AM. Keynote starts at 8:00 AM.)
The Bucks Lehigh EduSummit is a
collaboratively organized and facilitated two day professional learning
experience coordinated by educators in the Quakertown Community School District , Palisades School District, Salisbury
Township School District, Southern Lehigh School District, Bucks County IU, and Carbon Lehigh IU, which are all located in
northern Bucks county and southern Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. Teachers in
other neighboring districts are welcome to attend as well! The purpose of the
EduSummit is to collaborate, connect, share, and learn together for the benefit
of our kids. Focus areas include: Educational Technology, PA Core, Social
Media, Best Practices, etc.
http://buckslehighedusummit2014.wikispaces.com/Home
http://buckslehighedusummit2014.wikispaces.com/Home
Educational Collaborators
Pennsylvania Summit Aug. 13-14
The Educational Collaborators, in partnership with the Wilson School
District , is pleased to announce a unique
event, the Pennsylvania Summit featuring
Google for Education on August 13th and 14th, 2014! This summit is an open event primarily
focused on Google Apps for Education, Chromebooks, Google Earth, YouTube, and
many other effective and efficient technology integration solutions to help
digitally convert a school district. These
events are organized by members of the Google Apps for Education community.
Pre-K for PA has supporters
all over the greater Philadelphia region who want to help ensure all three and four
year-old children can access quality pre-K.
We need your help -- join an upcoming phone bank. Join
a fun gathering of like minds in Philadelphia and Conshohocken on
Wednesday evenings throughout the summer. We are calling fellow Pre-K for
PA supporters to build local volunteer teams.
Call a Pre-K Friend in Philly:
UnitedWay Building , 6th Floor 1709 Ben Franklin Parkway
19107
Wed July 30, 5-7 PM
United
Wed July 30, 5-7 PM
Call a Pre-K Friend in Mont Co:
Anne's House 242 Barren Hill Road Conshohocken PA 19428
Wed July 30, 5-7pm
Anne's House 242 Barren Hill Road Conshohocken PA 19428
Wed July 30, 5-7pm
RSVP: http://salsa3.salsalabs.com/o/51084/c/10476/p/salsa/web/common/public/signup?signup_page_KEY=9390
EPLC Education Issues Workshop
for Legislative Candidates, Campaign Staff, and Interested Voters - Harrisburg
July 31
Register Now! EPLC will again be hosting
an Education Issues Workshop for Legislative Candidates, Campaign Staff,
and Interested Voters. This nonpartisan, one-day program will take place
on Thursday, July 31 in Harrisburg. Space is limited. Click
here to learn more about workshop and to register.
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