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PA Ed Policy Roundup for April 30, 2015:
How is special
education paid for in Pennsylvania
public schools?
Beyond a New School Funding Formula:
Lifting Student Achievement to Grow PA's Economy
Wednesday, May 6, 2015 from 7:30 AM to 10:00 AM (EDT) Harrisburg , PA
By Sara K. Satullo | For
lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on April 29, 2015 at 2:02 PM, updated April 29, 2015 at 2:36 PM
on April 29, 2015 at 2:02 PM, updated April 29, 2015 at 2:36 PM
The panel tasked
with developing a fair, equitable way to distribute state funding to Pennsylvania 's 500
school districts is expected to finish its work in early June,Keystone Crossroads reports. The Basic Education Funding Commission,
co-chaired by Lehigh Valley Sen. Pat Brown, R-Lehigh, has spent the past
year holding hearings, studying funding options and developing recommendations
to fund the state's education system.
"In the Multiple Choices podcast, Keystone Crossroads
senior education writer Kevin McCorry joins with Paul Socolar, publisher and
editor of the Public School Notebook, and Notebook contributing editor Dale
Mezzacappa to explain and explore the history, complexities and controversies
of public education funding in Pennsylvania."
How is special education paid for in Pennsylvania public
schools?
WHYY Newsworks/Keystone
Crossroads APRIL 29, 2015 MULTIPLE
CHOICES: PART 3
Third in an occasional series of podcasts and web "explainers."
What is special education?
Special education
consists of supplemental services designed for students who have special needs
due to cognitive or physical disabilities. The Individuals with Disabilities
Education ACT (IDEA), a federal law enacted in 1990, guarantees a "free
appropriate public education" to children, regardless of their disability.
IDEA reauthorized and built upon a 1975 law that first created a federal
mandate for public schools to educate children with disabilities at no cost to
the family, in the least restrictive setting possible.
"The court ruling means
students in poor districts will continue to receive a substandard education
simply because of where they live. It means Pennsylvania will continue to fail to meet
its duty to adequately and equitably fund its public schools."
Court punts on
fair education funding in Pa.
(YDR opinion)
York Daily Record editorial UPDATED: 04/28/2015
04:06:17 PM EDT
Kids and
taxpayers in poor school districts who for years have been weighed down by an
inherently unfair funding system got a hard civics lesson last week. Their plea for the courts to fix what is
clearly a broken system of school funding in Pennsylvania was ignored. A lawsuit filed by officials in six
financially struggling schools districts, along with seven parents, the
Pennsylvania Association of Rural and Small Schools, and the NAACP Pennsylvania
State conference was
rejected by the Commonwealth Court . The court ruled that education funding lies
in the realm of the Legislature — which is nice and tidy, unless your child
happens to live in, say, York city.
Roebuck: New national report spotlights Pa. charter school
problems; Report says waste, fraud and abuse may total $1.4 billion nationwide
HARRISBURG, April 29 – State Rep. James Roebuck,
D-Phila., Democratic chairman of the House Education Committee, said a new national report shows the need for strong
charter school reforms in Pennsylvania like the legislation he plans to
introduce soon.
The
report by the Center for Popular Democracy and the Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools is titled
"The Tip of the Iceberg: Charter School Vulnerabilities to Waste, Fraud,
And Abuse." It covers more than $200 million in alleged or confirmed
financial fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement in charter schools. The report
says standard forensic auditing methodologies suggest the real total is closer
to $1.4 billion, but that much "will go undetected because the federal
government, the states, and local charter authorizers lack the oversight
necessary to detect the fraud." Roebuck
said: "Philadelphia and Pennsylvania are unfortunately
well-represented in this report. In Harrisburg ,
House Republicans have passed a charter school bill (H.B. 530) that falls
short on needed reforms and oversight and would override local control to
make it even easier to start charter schools – a dangerous combination for kids
and taxpayers. House Democrats will continue to stand for greater
accountability and transparency in these privately run, publicly funded schools.
Fortunately, the Senate and Governor Tom Wolf still have the opportunity to do
better, and the governor's budget proposes serious reforms for charter
schools."
One speaker at
SRC hearing on optimistic school budget
MARTHA
WOODALL, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST
UPDATED: Thursday, April 30, 2015, 1:08 AM POSTED: Wednesday, April
29, 2015, 8:57 PM
The
Philadelphia School Reform Commission held a hearing Wednesday night to gather
comments on its proposed $2.9 billion spending plan for the fiscal year that
begins July 1. But only one speaker - retired teacher Karel Kilimnik - weighed
in at the sparsely attended session. Kilimnik
decried the fact that schools are forced to compete with each other for scarce
resources. "It's become The Hunger Games again," she
said. As part of the budget
presentation, two principals told the commission how they would spend the
additional money at their schools if Gov. Wolf's proposed budget is enacted.
Another ASPIRA
charter school seeks union vote
REGINA
MEDINA, Daily News Staff
Writer medinar@phillynews.com,
215-854-5985
Posted: Thursday,
April 30, 2015, 12:16 AM
OLNEY CHARTER HIGH School
staffers will cast ballots today in a union election, and it appears that their
organizing efforts have paved the way for another ASPIRA-run school to seek to
unionize. Employees from the John B. Stetson Charter
School , on B Street near Ontario in Kensington, filed a petition
Monday with the National Labor Relations Board asking the agency to hold a
union vote at the school. "Like the
teachers at Olney, the Stetson staff wants a protected voice in laying the
groundwork for the future of our schools," said Stetson teacher Jaimie
Stevenson. The new union would be part
of the Alliance of Charter School Employees, an affiliate of the American
Federation of Teachers. It's the same union that Olney staffers would join if
they vote yes.
" But school budgets
have to be passed before the state budget deadline, so districts won't know
what they'll get until after their budgets are passed. Expecting too much from
the state can leave a hole in a district's budget, but budgeting for less can
result in unnecessary tax hikes and program reductions."
"… Total expenditures are up by 3.5 percent,
mostly because of pension and charter school costs."
Bethlehem Area's budget calls for tax
hike, no job cuts
The Bethlehem Area School District
is looking at a budget that calls for a 2.9 percent tax hike
By Jacqueline
PalochkoOf The
Morning Call
April 29, 2015
The Bethlehem Area School District
is considering a $245 million budget that calls for a 2.9 percent property tax
hike and no job cuts. At a Wednesday
night budget workshop, the school board gave its support to a preliminary
budget for 2015-16 that district officials are crafting. Superintendent
Joseph Roy called the budget "conservative." The district is
budgeting an additional $1.5 million from the state, even though Gov. Tom Wolf
proposed an extra $5.5 million in his budget.
While Wolf's proposed budget is promising to school districts, but it
faces a tough road ahead because Republicans who control the Legislature have
said they have no intention of approving the tax hikes in the budget
OJR, teachers
agree on new contract a year early
By Laura Catalano,
The Mercury OSTED: 04/29/15, 11:06 AM
EDT
SOUTH
COVENTRY >> The Owen J. Roberts School Board has unanimously approved an
early-bird contract with the teachers’ union that agrees to an average net
increase in salaries and benefits of 2.6 percent over the two-year contract
period. The agreement, which was
ratified by the Owen J. Roberts Education Association on April 22, is an
extension of a four-year contract that was set to expire June 30, 2016. The new
two-year contract will go into effect at the expiration of the old contract,
and last through June 30, 2018. School
Board President William LaCoff, reading from a prepared statement at a
regularly scheduled board meeting Monday evening, noted that the contract
“includes the addition of online learning opportunities for students.” It also
keeps increases for supplemental positions and extracurricular activities
within the state’s Act 1 index, based on the cost-of-living.
Pottsgrove
school budget brings hard choices, fierce advocacy
By Evan Brandt, The Mercury POSTED: 04/29/15, 7:10 PM EDT |
LOWER
POTTSGROVE >> Reducing art, music and business teachers as a way to help
close a pending budget gap of nearly $850,000 was met with stiff public
resistance Tuesday night as speaker after speaker urged, chided and
pleaded with the school board to find another way. Nine
speakers addressed the board and none of them agreed with a proposal to replace
retiring choral teacher Cynthia Foust with a new half-time teacher; not
replacing a retiring art teacher; eliminating one business teacher position and
not replacing a retiring elementary school teacher as a way to help cost the
gap.
Hatboro-Horsham
2015-16 budget shows $1.6 million deficit
Intelligencer
By Gary Weckselblatt Staff Writer April 29, 2015
With the
budget deadline for its 2015-16 budget less than two months away, the Hatboro-Horsham School District is working to shrink a
$1.6 million deficit. That number could
be sliced to $402,558 if the district raises taxes by 1.9 percent, the amount
allowed by the Act 1 Index, the state’s property tax law. A 1.9 percent levy
would generate $1.2 million. That’s
progress from January, when the next school year’s spending plan was $1.2
million in the red even after a 1.9 percent tax increase. Bob Reichert, the district’s director of
business affairs, recently told the Finance Committee that “in the past few
weeks we continue to make reductions” to the budget. Reichert also said if the
district does increase taxes, he hopes it will be below the Act 1 index.
North Penn
School District refining budget figures, may dip into reserves to address $6.7
million deficit
North Penn Reporter By Jarreau Freeman jfreeman@montgomerynews.com @JarreauFreeman on Twitter Published: Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Lansdale
>> North Penn Business Administration Director Steve Skrocki said no
personnel or programs will be cut from the 2015-16 budget, but the district is
trimming some of its expenses to tackle the $6.7 million deficit they face next
year. “Administrators have their own
department budgets and have submitted their initial requests, which showed up
on the preliminary budget unchanged,” Skrocki said during an interview after
April 23’s school board action meeting. “Now we are at the point where we are
going back to the departments and challenging them to justify the expenses they
have for [next year’s] budget.”
"The biggest cost
increases for the district are state-mandated retirement contributions, which
will increase by $900,000 going into the 2015-16 year, McHale-Small said.
Health care benefits will see the next biggest increase, going up by about
$375,000."
Will Saucon Valley
be able to avoid a tax increase?
By Christina Tatu Of The Morning Call April 29,
2015
The Saucon Valley
School District is facing
a potential $850,000 budget deficit going into next school year. District officials during Tuesday night's
school board meeting discussed how they might reduce the deficit. The discussion included talk of a possible
tax increase, which would be the first for Saucon Valley
in about six years, Superintendent Monica McHale-Small said.
Blogger's note: the
Commonwealth Foundation has been a strong supporter of all things school
choice: vouchers, charters, cybers, tax credit programs….
'Racist,
homophobic, sexist, classist ... bigots.' Philly Rep. unloads on Commonwealth
Foundation: Wednesday Morning Coffee
Penn
Live By John L. Micek | jmicek@pennlive.com Email
the author | Follow on Twitter on
April 29, 2015 at 8:20 AM
Good Wednesday Morning, Fellow Seekers.
It's no secret thatHarrisburg 's Commonwealth Foundation tilts
to the right. The think-tank on State
Street has helped lead the charge on such
conservative cornerstone issues as Paycheck Protection and the amusingly
misnamed "Right to Work," movement.
It's also been in the vanguard of opposition toGov. Tom Wolf's budget and the tax hike plans embedded within
it. And if there's some liberal cause making the rounds, it can be reliably counted
upon to oppose it. All of
which apparently didn't sit well with stateRep. Brian Sims, D-Philadelphia, who took to the Facebooks earlier this month to
go all Old Testament prophet in the wildnerness on the Koch Bros.-linked
think-tank.
It's no secret that
'Incredible
journey': Youth choirs shares music with all 67 PA counties
Penn Live
By Jan Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com Email
the author | Follow on Twitter on April
29, 2015 at 2:19 PM, updated April 29, 2015 at 2:41 PM
No one
can accuse Hamilton-Gibson Children and Youth Choirs of not living up to their
state House designation as "Pennsylvania 's
Singing Youth Ambassadors."
Hamilton-Gibson Children And Youth Choirs Complete A 67-County
Tour Of PennsylvaniaAfter being designated "Pennsylvania's Singing
Youth Ambassadors" in 2001, the Hamilton-Gibson choirs, a community youth
choral program based in Tioga County, began a quest to sing in all 67 counties.
It started out with performances in eight counties near their homes but then in
2008, they set out to sing in the remaining 59 counties. They achieved their
goal on Tuesday with a performance in Chester County . Since being dubbed with that distinction
through the passage of resolution offered by Rep. Matt Baker, R-Tioga, the
fourth through 12th graders who have participated in this 20-year-old community
choral program have performed in all 67 counties. They completed their "67
Initiative" on Tuesday with a performance in Chester County .
On
Wednesday, the 48-member choir celebrated their goal with a performance in the
state Capitol where its statewide tour began that often included a performance
of the state song, "Pennsylvania ."
Abington chess team wins
national titles
Philly.com by Kathy Bocella LAST UPDATED: Thursday, April 30, 2015,
1:08 AM
ABINGTON The
Abington High School chess team won three titles at the U.S. Chess Federation's
national tournament in Columbus ,
Ohio , this month. The team also
won three state titles in March. More
than 1,500 of the country's top high school chess players competed at the
national tournament. Abington went up against 40 teams in its division and won
three of the five national titles.
The Tip of the Iceberg: Charter School Vulnerabilities To Waste, Fraud,
And Abuse
Escalating Fraud Warrants Immediate Federal and State Action to Protect Public Dollars and Prevent Financial Mismanagement
The Center for Popular Democracy Apr 27, 2015
Escalating Fraud Warrants Immediate Federal and State Action to Protect Public Dollars and Prevent Financial Mismanagement
The Center for Popular Democracy Apr 27, 2015
Executive Summary A year
ago, the Center for Popular Democracy (CPD) issued a report demonstrating that
charter schools in 15 states—about one-third of the states with charter
schools—had experienced over $100 million in reported fraud, waste, abuse, and
mismanagement. This report offers further evidence that the money we know has
been misused is just the tip of the iceberg. Over the past 12 months, millions
of dollars of new alleged and confirmed financial fraud, waste, abuse, and
mismanagement in charter schools have come to light, bringing the new total to
over $200 million. Despite the
tremendous ongoing investment of public dollars to charter schools, government
at all levels has failed to implement systems that proactively monitor charter
schools for fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement. While charter schools are
subject to significant reporting requirements by various public offices
(including federal monitors, chartering entities, county superintendents, and
state controllers and auditors), very few public offices regularly monitor for
fraud.
Another Piece of Evidence
That America 's
Students Know Little About Their Country
Eighth-graders continue to
display far-from-sufficient knowledge about geography, civics, and history.
The Atlantic by EMILY
RICHMOND APR 29, 2015
American
eighth-graders continue to demonstrate lackluster knowledge and skills when
asked basic questions about U.S.
history, geography, and civics. New data shows that only
between 18 and 27 percent of students scored "proficient" or
"higher." The results from the
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) is based on a representative
sampling of more than 29,000 U.S.
eighth-graders tested last year across the three subjects. (In history, for
instance, it tested more than 11,200 students.)
Since 1998, scores have been inching upward in several topic areas,
particularly for minority and low-income students. But overall there were no
meaningful gains in student performance since the combined history, geography,
and civics test was last given in 2010.
Beyond a New School Funding
Formula: Lifting Student Achievement to Grow PA's Economy
Wednesday, May 6, 2015 from 7:30 AM to 10:00 AM (EDT) Harrisburg , PA
7:30 am: Light breakfast fare and registration; 8:00 am:
Program
Opening Remarks by Neil D. Theobald, President, Temple University
SESSION I: THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF ACHIEVEMENT GAPS IN
PENNSYLVANIA’S PUBLIC SCHOOLS with introduction by Rob Wonderling,
President, Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, and Member, Center on
Regional Politics Executive Committee.
Presentation by Lynn A. Karoly, Senior Economist, RAND
Corporation
SESSION II: WHAT CAN PENNSYLVANIA
LEARN FROM THE WORLD’S LEADING SCHOOL SYSTEMS? with introduction
by David H. Monk, Dean, Pennsylvania
State University College
of Education .
Presentation by Marc S. Tucker, President and CEO, National Center on Education and the
Economy
Sessions to be followed by a response panel moderated
by Francine Schertzer, Director of Programming, Pennsylvania Cable
Network
Program presented by the University Consortium to Improve
Public School Finance and Promote Economic Growth
Common Core Forum: A Closer Look at the PA Core
Standards
Thursday, May 7, 6:30 - 8:00 pm Radnor Middle
School
Presented by the Leagues of
Women Voters of Chester County , Haverford,
Lower Merion , Narberth and Radnor. Supported by the Radnor School District
Panelists Include:
Fred Brown, K-12
Math Supervisor, School District of Haverford
Township
Jon Cetel, Education
Reform Agent, PennCAN
Mary Beth Hegeman,
Middle School Teacher, Lower
Merion School
District
Cynthia Kruse , Delaware County Intermediate
Unit
Susan Newitt,
Retired Elementary Teacher, Lower
Merion School
District
Wendy Towle,
Supervisor of Language Arts & Staff Development, T/E School
District
Larry Wittig,
Chairman of the State Board of Education
PHILLY DISTRICT TO HOLD
COMMUNITY BUDGET MEETINGS
Wednesday,
May 6
Tuesday,
May 12
Thursday,
May 14
Congreso, 216 West Somerset St .
Wednesday,
May 20
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