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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup May 22, 2016:
House could vote on HB 1552, which would make the new
Basic Ed Funding Formula permanent, as early as Monday May 23
Make
the new funding formula permanent; pass a budget for 2016-17 that increases
funding for public schools by at least $400 million
Pennsylvania has the widest funding gap between wealthy & poor
schools in the country.
Contributing only 36%, PA is ranked 46th in the US for its
share of education funding.
Campaign for Fair Education
Funding Website
UPDATE:
Last week the state Senate passed HB 1552, which would make the Basic Education
Funding Formula permanent, by a vote of 49-1.
The formula would remove politics from state school funding decisions,
directing money to school districts based on objective factors, such as student
enrollment, the needs of the student population, school district wealth and
capacity to raise local revenue.
The
House is expected to consider and possibly vote on HB 1552 as early as Monday,
May 23. Ask your state Representative to vote 'yes' for House Bill 1552, which
would make the BEFC's school funding formula permanent.
Lawmakers must get serious
about pension reform
Citizens Voice by THE EDITORIAL BOARD Published: May 21, 2016
The Democratic Wolf
administration and Republican legislative majorities have just begun the battle
over the 2016-2017 state government budget. But one thing already is certain —
both sides’ failure to reform the pension systems for state and public school
employees means that taxpayers will pay a whopping $6.1 billion pension bill, a
257 percent increase over the $1.7 billion pension cost just five years ago. Such ineffectiveness is breathtaking, all the
more so because lawmakers claim to have established effective reforms in 2010.
They were tweaks, however, that did not get at the heart of the problem. And
now, a new reform bill constitutes yet another partial measure. Lawmakers created the crisis in 2001 when
they increased their own benefit by 50 percent and those for school and state
employees by 25 percent, then decided that investment revenue would cover the
costs. They followed up with increases for people who already had retired, and
deferred state payments into the system.
Now that the bill has come due, lawmakers refuse to undo their own
botched governance. Yet again, they have introduced a bill that focuses
entirely on new state and school employees, rather than returning themselves
and current employees to the generous 2001 benefit levels.
Pa. lawmakers hope to avoid another budget impasse
By Nico Salvatori 814-870-1714 Erie Times-News May 22, 2016 06:28 AM
ERIE, Pa. -- Local
legislators are optimistic a state budget impasse can be avoided this year.
State Rep. Flo
Fabrizio, of Erie, D-2nd Dist., said negotiations are underway between Gov. Tom
Wolf's administration and Democratic and Republican leaders in the General
Assembly. "They are in the
preliminary stages," Fabrizio said. "But there seems to be a
prevailing attitude that we all want to get this done by the June 30
deadline." Passage of the 2015-16
budget was nine months late because legislators and the Wolf administration
could not agree on how to balance the budget, increase funding for education
and eliminate the state's structural deficit, which some estimates have put at
nearly $2 billion. The initiatives Wolf
offered, like raising taxes to increase education spending, were met with harsh
resistance by Republicans. They favored reforming the state's public pension
system and privatizing Pennsylvania's liquor stores as ways to cut long-term
costs and generate new revenue. Those
ideas are back on the table this year for the 2016-17 budget, and it is not yet
clear where there might be room for compromise.
Teplitz's 'Judgment Day'
budget reform package draws support
Penn Live By Jan Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on May 20, 2016 at 11:31 AM, updated May 21, 2016 at 8:08 AM
on May 20, 2016 at 11:31 AM, updated May 21, 2016 at 8:08 AM
Sen. Rob Teplitz
braced himself for some strong reaction to Wednesday's unveiling of his "Judgment Day" state budget reform idea of
imposing stiff consequences on his legislative colleagues and top executive
branch officials if a budget doesn't get done by the June 30 end of the fiscal
year. But the Dauphin County Democrat
was surprised to find that no one was critical or said his plan was
wrongheaded. Instead, the gist of his proposed package of bills gained
the support of fellow Democratic Sen. Jim Brewster of Allegheny County as well
as many of those who cast votes in PennLive's informal unscientific poll about
it.
“Adding to their angst is
a state law that does two very important things: Mandates that all public
schools have a budget in place by July 1, and that the books be balanced. That’s
right, your local school board member can’t simply plunk down a credit card and
buy themselves another month to make the numbers add up. Unfortunately, while our legislators are
quite adept at holding others’ feet to the fire, they don’t exactly abide by
the same set of playing rules. Nowhere is that more true
than here in Pennsylvania.”
Editorial: Holding the
line in Upper Darby
Delco Times POSTED: 05/20/16,
5:06 AM EDT | UPDATED: 1 DAY AGO
You rarely ever hear
about them – until things go wrong.
They toil for the
most part in anonymity. Yet they have one of the toughest jobs around.
They are the elected
members of your local school board. That’s right, these people actually
volunteer to sign up for this gig. They put their name on the line and run for
elected office.
For their efforts
they are entrusted with millions of dollars of public funding, and one of the
most important tasks we have, the education of our young people. Education isn’t cheap. Just ask any local
school board member. Think it’s tough
juggling your household budget. Consider the plight of your local school board
member. At least most families can put
all their bills on the table, take a look at their income, and come up with a
logical spending plan. For local school
directors, they instead get to play a yearly game of hide-and-seek with the
elusive bottom line.
The promise of a
"fair funding formula" recommended by the bipartisan Basic Education
Funding Commission and enacted legally by the 2015-16 fiscal code has turned
out to be a false promise. Because our Legislature is only willing to allocate
new funds by this formula, the funding inequity will take decades to correct. Unless
there is some special appropriation, this approach will prove to be too little,
too late for Erie.
Broken system 'dismantling' Erie schools: Jay Badams
By JAY BADAMS Contributing
writer May 22, 2016 06:11 AM
Jay Badams is superintendent of
the Erie School District.
ERIE, Pa. -- Five
years ago, as the Erie School District began to pick up the pieces after
dealing with a $26 million budget shortfall, I made both promises and
predictions. I knew we had a great deal of financial work to do internally, and
we did it. Erie now spends less state and local money per pupil than any
district in the tri-county area, and less than 80 percent of the school
districts in Pennsylvania. I predicted
publicly, and on many occasions, that if the state did not change the way it
funds public education, that our financial recovery would be short-lived. I
predicted that our fixed costs would rise, and that our pension obligations and
charter school costs would ensure that we would approach insolvency in three to
five years. So, here we are, with the
distraction of the 2015-16 budget impasse behind us, facing the continued
reality of a broken and inequitable funding system as we again cut our way to a
balanced 2016-17 budget.
Our view: Mobilize community to save Erie's schools
ERIE TIMES-NEWS May
22, 2016 06:31 AM
ERIE, Pa. -- We
share Erie schools Superintendent Jay Badams' frustration and outrage at
Harrisburg's failure to address inequities in public school funding that have
produced an educational and financial crisis in the Erie School District.
Everyone in the region should.
When it comes to
public education, there are a lot of things to argue about in the political and
ideological realms. Basic fairness in providing educational opportunities to
all of Pennsylvania's children shouldn't be one of them. Having access to those opportunities
shouldn't depend on a child's ZIP code. Today in Erie and a lot of other
Pennsylvania communities, it does. Even
after taking decisive action to clean up the mismanagement and bloat left by
his predecessor, Badams has been left to cut his way to a balanced budget year
after year. That has culminated in the especially ugly choices now before him
and the School Board. In this year's
budget cycle, Badams and his team have identified $6 million in cuts. Balancing
the 2016-17 budget will require $4.3 million more.
Close Erie high schools? Your voices
Erie schools Superintendent Jay
Badams has posed the possibility of closing Northwest Pennsylvania Collegiate
Academy and the Erie School District's other three high schools to help close
the district's huge funding shortfall.
ERIE TIMES-NEWS May
20, 2016 04:33 PM
ERIE, Pa. -- After
years of massive spending cuts and educational cuts, the Erie School District
still isn't close to being able to pay its bills. In addition to considering
the elimination of sports, extracurricular activities and school libraries,
Erie schools Superintendent Jay Badams has posed the possibility of closing
Erie's four high schools in the 2017-18 school year and dispersing their
students to surrounding school districts. We asked our friends on the
GoErie.com/Erie Times-News Facebook page about whether that option would be
necessary or feasible, and about anything else the city school system could do
to dig out of its financial hole. Here's some of what they had to say.
Canon-McMillan, teachers reach early three-year
contract deal
Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette May 21, 2016 3:10 PM
Teachers in the
Canon-McMillan School District have reached an early agreement on a new
three-year contract. The new deal,
approved Thursday by the school board, covers 335 members of the Canon-McMillan
Education Association and goes into effect Aug. 16, according to a joint news
release from the teachers and district. Teachers will receive raises of 3
percent over the life of the contract with no increase in health care
contributions, although new employees will have to show a spouse has no other
health insurance. The news release said
the new contract was the result of “a collaborative process” between the union
and district with no attorneys involved.
Pennsylvania seniority
bill advances the war on teachers
WHYY Newsworks THE PHILADELPHIA EXPERIMENT A
BLOG BY SOLOMON JONES MAY
21, 2016
I’ve watched with a
mix of amazement and chagrin as the blame for a crumbling school system has
been callously laid at teachers’ feet. To
be sure, there are bad teachers within the profession, and they should be
culled from the ranks. But in my experience, most teachers choose their
vocation because they genuinely care about children. And for those who find
their calling in the classroom, a long career can give them the opportunity to
literally change their students’ lives. Still, teachers have
found themselves facing unrelenting attacks from conservative politicians and
their allies. In Pennsylvania, the latest salvo in the war on teachers is the
so-called “Protecting Excellent Teachers Act,” a Republican-backed bill that
aims to make teacher seniority a thing of the past. Gov. Wolf has vetoed the
bill, and Republicans have responded by threatening to hijack the state budget
process, a move that could once again throw our state into economic chaos.
The legislators
pushing the “Protecting Excellent Teachers Act” will tell you it’s
about improving educational outcomes for children by putting the best teachers
in classrooms. I’m not buying it. I think it’s a cynical ploy to gain political
advantage by crippling the teachers unions that typically support Democrats.
Teacher layoff issue now
linked to budget
Citizens Voice BY ROBERT SWIFT Published: May 22, 2016
HARRISBURG — The
shape of state budget fights to come can be seen in the political battle over
the teacher furlough bill that was vetoed last week by Gov. Tom Wolf. This measure would change the rules for
determining how school districts carry out teacher layoffs. It would allow
school officials to base layoffs on a statewide educator evaluation system
adopted in 2012, rather than starting layoffs with the teachers who have the least
seniority. As soon as the bill was
approved by the Republican-controlled Legislature two weeks ago, the Democratic
governor said he would veto it. That
sparked a campaign by GOP lawmakers calling on Wolf to reconsider his position.
They said the bill will ensure the best teachers remain in the classroom if
circumstances require layoffs. This
campaign involved a string of press conferences, public statements and heavy
use of social media with a wave of tweets by lawmakers touting the bill and
chiding the governor for opposing it. The
campaign reached a crescendo last Tuesday when House and Senate GOP leaders
appeared together to lay down a gauntlet.
They suggested that if Wolf vetoed the teacher furlough bill, he would
quickly encounter the issue again when negotiations start next month to fashion
a state budget for fiscal 2016-17.
SEN. SCOTT WAGNER: Wolf
kills another education reform
The Mercury Opinion
by Senator Scott Wagner POSTED: 05/20/16, 6:32 PM EDT
Gov. Tom Wolf
continues to resist any reforms that would change the Pennsylvania education
system. This past Wednesday, Governor
Wolf vetoed legislation designed to keep the best teachers in Pennsylvania’s
classrooms and boost student achievement by ending the practice of
seniority-based layoffs. In
Pennsylvania, teacher layoffs are conducted in order of inverse seniority. The last teacher hired is the first person
fired, regardless of job performance. Pennsylvania is one
of only a few states that require seniority to be the sole factor in
determining layoffs. With the governor’s
action, our Commonwealth will continue this backward approach. House Bill 805,
known as the Protecting Excellent Teachers Act, would have ensured that school
districts use teacher performance to guide furlough and reinstatement
decisions. Performance ratings
would have been based on the comprehensive statewide educator evaluation system
adopted in 2012, under which observed educators are assigned a rating of
distinguished, proficient, needs improvement or failing.
Cameron County School
Board faces daunting budget figures
Bradford Era By AMANDA JONES Era Correspondent amandajonesera@yahoo.com Posted: Friday,
May 20, 2016 10:00 am
EMPORIUM — Members
of the Cameron County School District Board continue efforts to balance
expected revenues with expenditures prior to passage of a budget for the
2016-17 school year. At the last
meeting, held a little more than a week ago, the projected deficit stood around
$500,000 for the $12.6 million budget. Through recent administrative efforts
and directives given to Business Manager Carl Mitchell during this meeting, the
projected deficit is expected to be closer to $300,000. Approximately $100,000 in savings has been
gained through refinancing of the district’s bonds, while an additional $90,000
will be saved by not filling several vacancies — a high school social studies
position and two elementary aides. Superintendent
Christine Holjencin advised the board that an additional sum could be saved by
not hiring an assistant principal. The savings estimate to leave the social
studies and assistant principal positions open was around $170,000 annually,
with an estimated $20,000 in savings realized by not hiring aides for the
above-listed open positions.
W-B Area plans to
eliminate programs, lay off teachers
Citizens Voice BY
MICHAEL P. BUFFER Published: May 20, 2016
The Wilkes-Barre
Area School District is planning to eliminate art, industrial-arts and
consumer-science courses and could lay off about 30 professional employees for
the next school year, according to sources familiar with the plan. The school board is expected to vote on the
proposal to eliminate programs and teaching jobs at Monday’s board
meeting. Superintendent Bernard
Prevuznak confirmed he personally met with teachers who may be affected on
Friday, but declined to disclose specifics until Monday’s meeting. Sources spoke about the layoff plan on
condition of anonymity because the district has not yet made it public. Jeff
Ney, president of the teachers’ union, did not respond to a call seeking
comment.
Brian O'Neill: Two families, two school options
By Brian O'Neill /
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette May 22, 2016 12:00 AM
When you raise
children in a county where the school districts are divided more than 40 ways
and the municipalities are split another 130, a move of a mile and a half can
change everything. There are 1.2
million stories in the compartmentalized county. This is one of them. Christopher Rolinson lost a school board
election in the Cornell district last November. That’s one of Allegheny
County’s smallest, with every student from Coraopolis and Neville Island in one
K-12 building. Fifty students will graduate next month. Mr. Rolinson campaigned last year on the idea
the district was too small and should merge with a neighboring one. He
attracted support but not enough, and now the Rolinsons are merging with a
neighboring district themselves.
Burrell
School District's property tax could rise nearly 3 percent
Trib Live BY LIZ HAYES | Friday, May 20, 2016,
2:54 p.m.
Burrell School
District's proposed 2016-17 budget includes a nearly 3 percent property tax
increase. Also included is the
continuation of a school resource officer program despite several school board
members questioning the district's $107,000 share of the salary, benefits and
expenses for Lower Burrell police Detective John Marhefka. Board member James Kunkle in April asked the
board to review whether the district could continue to fund the program in
light of an estimated $280,000 deficit in next year's budget. Business Manager Jennifer Callahan said the
elimination of a proposed new teaching position and the teachers union agreeing
to pay for a greater share of their health insurance premiums whittled away at
the deficit in what is now a tentative $29.6 million spending plan.
Daniel Boone support
staff, teachers to rally against outsourcing of jobs
The Mercury By Digital First Media POSTED: 05/20/16, 6:14 PM EDT
AMITY >> The
Daniel Boone Federation of Support Staff, Local 4954 of the American Federation
of Teachers will hold a rally and news conference Monday to show
their opposition to school district plans to outsource 35 custodial, grounds
and maintenance jobs. The rally will be
held at 6:15 p.m. at the Boone Administration Building at 2144
Weavertown Road. “Our message to the
board is simple: Do your homework,” said Local 4954 President Frank
Abbattiscianni. The Daniel Boone
Area School Board is considering contracting GCA Services Group for maintenance
work. “GCA Services Group has a
less-than-stellar record of providing the kind of high-quality services that
students and taxpayers are used to and deserve,” Abbattiscianni said.
Pottstown School Board
president fires back in teacher salary dispute
By Evan
Brandt, The Mercury POSTED: 05/21/16,
6:14 PM EDT | UPDATED: 8 HRS AGO
POTTSTOWN >>
Pottstown School Board President Kim Stilwell fired back Thursday night
after months of teachers complaining publicly about their pay as contract talks
continue. “As much as I like to see the
teachers and the parents at the meetings to strengthen their cause for pay
raises, is it really time well spent?” Stilwell asked to a growing chorus of
groans and exclamations from the green-shirted teachers in the audience. Stilwell had just offered up a handful of
examples of teacher pay increases in contract steps over the last seven years,
ranging from 3.3 percent for less-experienced teachers to as much as 60.6
percent for those in the upper steps. “You
are all aware of our issues with our broken funding system and the issues in
this town which we are trying to correct,” said Stilwell.
Lancaster kids can get free books on bikes this summer
Lancaster Online by KARA NEWHOUSE | Staff
Writer May 20, 2016
Children in
Lancaster city can get free books delivered on bicycle this summer through a
new literacy program. The Mix at Arbor Place, an after-school
program, is partnering with The Common Wheel, a nonprofit bike shop, to create
the Pages on Pedals program. Volunteer bicyclists will distribute new books to
200 children each week in June. "Many
low-income students experience a summer learning slide, and this is just one
way to prevent that," said Jeremy Raff, assistant executive director for
The Mix at Arbor Place. Raff heard about
a similar program in Philadelphia, called Words on Wheels, and thought it could
work in Lancaster. "It was a
perfect fit and an exciting way to promote summer literacy," Raff said. Chris Caldwell, founder of The Common Wheel, said combining bikes and
books is "a no-brainer." "We're
all about using the bicycle as a tool and connecting people," he said. The Mix at Arbor Place also will offer free
summer literacy programs at its youth center in southeast Lancaster to
complement the program.
How do school districts
handle transgender issues?
York Daily Record by Angie Mason, amason@ydr.com11:28 p.m. EDT May
20, 2016
Some officials said a federal
letter outlining how schools should offer equal access to transgender students
won't affect them much.
When a student steps
forward to say that he or she is transgender, it's not something anyone takes
lightly, according to some local school officials. In some districts, there are meetings with
parents and students to hash out logistics like bathroom and name usage. There
can be complications. Parents might not be on the same page with their child.
Legal documents might not flag a substitute to a transgender student's
preferred name. Some York County school
officials said they've been dealing with situations like that for years. So a
letter from the federal government, outlining how transgender students should
be treated, isn't so much something new for them to adhere to, but additional
direction for navigating a sensitive, complex topic.
http://www.ydr.com/story/news/2016/05/20/how-do-school-districts-handle-transgender-issues/84599582/
Congress to Vote on Measure that Could Cut School
Lunch Access for 200K Kids Locally
If a provision circulating in a
draft of the school meal reauthorization bill becomes law, some 3 million kids
-- including nearly 200,000 in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware, could
lose access to school meals.
Nbc Philadelphia By Morgan Zalot (Published
Wednesday, May 18, 2016)
The U.S. Congress
could change the requirement for free school lunches meaning that about 200,000
students in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware could lose their free meal. Congress is set to
vote on Wednesday on a measure that could cause 3 million children nationwide
-- including about 200,000 in the tri-state area -- to lose access to free
school meals if it passes. The bill,
which would reauthorize the National School Lunch and Child Nutrition acts,
includes a proposal that would increase the threshold at which school lunch is
offered universally at a school. Currently,
through a measure called "community eligibility," a school's entire
student body is eligible for free lunches if at least 40 percent of students
qualify. The proposed bill would increase that threshold to 60 percent, putting
millions of children across the United States at risk of losing meal access.
“The study says that while charter-school
boards have the responsibility to follow the laws mandated of public schools,
the incentive of these outside organizations is to increase revenue or cut
expenses.”
"Supporters of
charter schools are using their popularity in black, urban communities to push
for states to remove their charter cap restrictions and to allow multiple
authorizers," one of the study's authors, Preston C. Green III, told The Washington Post, where we first
read about the study. "At the same time, private investors are lobbying
states to change their rules to encourage charter school growth. The result is
what we describe as a policy 'bubble,' where the combination of multiple
authorizers and a lack of oversight can end up creating an abundance of
poor-performing schools in particular communities."
An alarming new study says charter schools are
America's new subprime mortgages
Business Insider by Abby Jackson Jan. 6, 2016, 10:40 PM
The charter-school
industry — consisting of schools that are funded partly by tax dollars but run
independently — may be heading toward a bubble similar to that of the
subprime-mortgage crisis, according to a study published by four education
researchers. The study, "Are charter schools the new subprime loans?" warns of
several factors that appear to be edging the charter industry toward a bubble
premeditated by the same factors that encouraged banks to start offering risky
mortgage loans. With charters, school
authorizers play the role of the banks, as they have the power to decide
whether to issue a new charter school. There are a multiple types of
authorizers, including state education agencies and independent charter school
boards. Most authorizers are local education agencies.
Common Core testing group
wages aggressive campaign against critics on social media
By Valerie Strauss May 20
The
Common Core testing group called PARCC Inc. has been waging an aggressive
campaign to take down several dozen social media references to the PARCC test
being administered to students this spring — items that include questions from
the exam and some that don’t. Dozens of
education bloggers have been writing about the PARCC exam since May 7, when an
anonymous teacher posted a piece on the blog of Celia Oyler, an education
professor at Teachers College at Columbia University, that harshly critiqued
the fourth grade PARCC exam and offered three questions from the test many
students are taking this spring. Other education writers and activists began to
weigh in, critiquing those questions as being either inappropriate for the
grade level or nonsensical, and publishing some test items. PARCC Inc. officials say these postings and
tweets violate their copyright and can lead to problems with test validity.
Nominations now open for PSBA Allwein Awards (deadline
July 16)
PSBA Website POSTED
ON MAY 16, 2016 IN PSBA
NEWS
The Timothy M.
Allwein Advocacy Award was established in 2011 by the Pennsylvania School
Boards Association and may be presented annually to the individual school
director or entire school board to recognize outstanding leadership in
legislative advocacy efforts on behalf of public education and students that
are consistent with the positions in PSBA’s
Legislative Platform. The 2016 Allwein Award nominations will be
accepted starting today and all applications are due by July 16, 2016. The
nomination form can be downloaded from the website.
Join the Pennsylvania Principals Association at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, June 21, 2016, at The
Capitol in Harrisburg, PA, for its second annual Principals' Lobby Day.
Pennsylvania
Principals Association Monday, March 21, 2016 9:31 AM
To register, contact Dr. Joseph Clapper at clapper@paprincipals.org by
Tuesday, June 14, 2016. If you need assistance, we will provide
information about how to contact your legislators to schedule meetings. Click here for the informational flyer, which includes
important issues to discuss with your legislators.
2016 PA Educational
Leadership Summit July 24-26 State College
Summit Sponsors:
PA Principals Association - PA Association of School Administrators
- PA Association of Middle Level Educators - PA Association of
Supervision and Curriculum Development
The 2016
Educational Leadership Summit, co-sponsored by four leading Pennsylvania education associations,
provides an excellent opportunity for school district administrative teams and
instructional leaders to learn, share and plan together at a quality venue in
"Happy Valley."
Featuring Grant
Lichtman, author of EdJourney: A Roadmap to the Future of Education,
Secretary of Education Pedro Rivera (invited), and Dana
Lightman, author of POWER Optimism: Enjoy the Life You Have...
Create the Success You Want, keynote speakers, high quality breakout
sessions, table talks on hot topics and district team planning and job alike
sessions provides practical ideas that can be immediately reviewed and
discussed at the summit before returning back to your district. Register and pay by April 30, 2016 for the
discounted "early bird" registration rate:
Interested in letting our
elected leadership know your thoughts on education funding, a severance tax,
property taxes and the budget?
Governor Tom Wolf,
(717) 787-2500
Speaker of the
House Rep. Mike Turzai, (717) 772-9943
House Majority Leader Rep. Dave Reed, (717) 705-7173
Senate President Pro Tempore Sen. Joe Scarnati, (717) 787-7084
Senate Majority Leader Sen. Jake Corman, (717) 787-1377
House Majority Leader Rep. Dave Reed, (717) 705-7173
Senate President Pro Tempore Sen. Joe Scarnati, (717) 787-7084
Senate Majority Leader Sen. Jake Corman, (717) 787-1377
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