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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup July 13, 2016:
Charter school expansion emerges as
obstacle in PA #budget talks
Call your State Senator’s office this morning and urge them to
oppose the “charter reform” provisions in HB530/HB1606
“Browne said the talks over the charter
issue had turned more divisive than negotiations on taxes - long an albatross
on efforts to achieve on-time budgets.
"It's amazing," he said.”
Charter school expansion emerges as
obstacle in Pa. budget talks
Inquirer by Angela Couloumbis and Martha Woodall,
STAFF WRITERS Updated: JULY
13, 2016 — 1:08 AM EDT
HARRISBURG - Negotiators inched
toward an agreement Tuesday that would impose new taxes on cigarettes and
digital downloads in Pennsylvania, but a proposal to loosen caps on
charter-school enrollment emerged as a sticking point in striking a budget
deal, top senators said. Critics of the proposed changes
say they would leave Philadelphia and other cash-strapped school districts with
little say in managing the surge of charters within their borders - and the
added costs they can bring. Sen. Pat
Browne (R., Lehigh), chairman of the Appropriations Committee, called the
Philadelphia charter-school issue the "600-pound gorilla in this
conversation," and signaled that resolving it might have to wait until the
fall. He spoke after legislators
reconvened Tuesday afternoon - and then recessed only a few hours later -
without announcing a firm deal on how to fund the $31.5 billion spending plan
that lapsed into law at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday. The chambers are expected to return
Wednesday morning to begin voting on a tax package that will raise new revenue
for the budget.
“Throughout the morning and into the
afternoon, multiple sources identified charter school reform as the biggest
sticking point that was holding up a final deal. Even Senate Appropriations
Committee Chairman Pat Browne, R-Lehigh County, said as much at that point. "When the education code is harder to
move than a tax code, you know there are serious issues on the table," he
said.
However, a few hours later, Senate
Republicans announced that issue, like pension reform, got pushed off to a
later date, possibly this fall. "We
were very close but that at this point, it appears at this point that we may
not be able to complete that during the budget process. In either case, it is
not something for which we are willing to hold up finishing the budget,"
said Senate GOP spokeswoman Jennifer Kocher.
However, House Republicans were still discussing the issue, said caucus
spokesman Steve Miskin. Senate Democrats said they were waiting to hear what
the status of the issue was on Tuesday evening. An effort to get the Wolf
administration's take on it was unsuccessful. “
Could Pennsylvania soon have a finalized
state budget? Tune in Wednesday
By Jan Murphy |
jmurphy@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
July 12, 2016 at 8:16 PM, updated July 12, 2016 at 10:32 PM
The day Pennsylvania shakes off
the notoriety of being the only state in the nation without an enacted 2016-17
state budget could be nearing. Budget
negotiators spent a good part of Tuesday inching closer to a finalized revenue
package to fund the $31.5 billion spending plan that Gov. Tom Wolf allowed to become law at midnight Monday without
his signature. House Majority Leader
Dave Reed, R-Indiana County, voiced cautious optimism that everything could
come together in a day's time on a deal that House and Senate Republicans and
Democrats could vote on as early as Wednesday. "We are working intently with all five
parties," Reed said, following a mid-afternoon meeting. "Not that
there aren't some issues we still need to iron out. But that issues list is
narrowing."
“A source close to negotiations says
Governor Wolf has made clear he will not sign any bill that fails to allow
districts like Philadelphia to hold charter growth in check. If consensus can't be reached on some of the
more controversial proposals, it's likely that lawmakers will also punt on the
less contentious changes that most agree are necessary.”
Debate over Pa. charter schools gets
swirled into larger state budget talks
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY JULY 13, 2016A bill that would substantially revise Pennsylvania's charter school law for the first time since its inception nearly twenty years ago is being hotly debated in the capitol. Charter school advocates are couching the bill as a fair compromise, while traditional school advocates say it's an unwise overreach. Republican legislative leaders have been pushing for the bill to be included in any broader deal that would boost state revenues, Senate leaders though have said they are not willing to let it derail budget talks. On Sunday night, Gov. Tom Wolf agreed to allow a $31.5 billion spending plan to become law without first figuring out how to pay for it. As leaders work towards a revenue package compromise, a charter school policy debate has been swirled within the larger talks. Two decades after its inception, there's wide agreement that the current charter law has fallen well behind the times.
Pa. budget strategy dares lawsuit, bond
downgrade
Delco
Times By Marc Levy, The Associated Press POSTED: 07/12/16, 2:35 PM EDT
HARRISBURG, Pa. >> State
government began operating Tuesday under a $31 billion election-year spending
bill that nevertheless lacks the tax collections to sustain it for the entire
fiscal year, and lawmakers say they are scrambling to fix that before it draws
a lawsuit or bond downgrade. Tuesday was expected to be
crucial in determining whether the tax-averse Legislature controlled by huge
Republican majorities will pass a tax increase to fully fund the spending bill
and help shore up the state government’s deficit-riddled finances. Neither the
House nor the Senate had returned to voting session by mid-afternoon Tuesday. At midnight Monday, the spending bill became
law after negotiations proved fruitless, and Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf decided
not to stand in its way. Tax collections are projected to fall hundreds of
millions of dollars short of funding it, while nearly $600 million in aid to
Penn State, Temple, Pitt, Lincoln and Penn remained in limbo in the House.
Inquirer editorial: Have you seen Pa.
budget's missing half?
Inquirer Editorial Updated: JULY 12, 2016 — 3:01 AM EDT
Gov. Wolf says he will allow a
$31.5 billion spending bill to become law without his signature, but it can't
rightly be called a state budget because the legislature hasn't decided how to
pay for it. It could be described as half a budget, a spending plan to nowhere,
or another mostly empty gesture from Harrisburg. But it isn't a budget, and it
won't be until lawmakers agree on the taxes and other revenues that allow the
state to function. Intentionally or not,
the Democratic governor has stepped out of the Republican-controlled
legislature's way and is allowing it to race toward a brick wall of its own
construction. Lawmakers cannot fulfill their constitutional obligation to pass
a balanced budget without taking responsibility for adequate funding. Members are, of course, balking, and the
conservative Commonwealth Foundation has insisted that the governor must
balance the budget by cutting spending the legislature doesn't pay for. But
Wolf has already offered a balanced budget. It's the legislature's turn to
accept his proposal or provide a reasonable alternative. Moreover, legislators
should not be eager to give the governor the power to make unilateral spending
decisions by ceding their authority and duty to pass a credible budget - one
that relies on sustainable, recurring revenue rather than the gimmicks of the
past.
Trib Live BY BRAD
BUMSTED | Tuesday, July 12, 2016, 3:48 p.m.
HARRISBURG – Applying the state
sales tax to digital downloads – potentially on purchases from music to movies
– is among the revenue sources legislative budget negotiators and Gov. Tom Wolf
are discussing, spokespeople for House and Senate Republicans said Tuesday. Whether extending the sales tax to downloads
becomes part of a final revenue package to pay for a $31.5 billion budget
remains unclear. “It's definitely been
discussed,” said Stephen Miskin, spokesman for House Republicans. The state's use tax on items purchased out of
state from Internet vendors already applies to digital downloads. House Majority Leader Dave Reed, R-Indiana
County, said “a lot of progress has been made” on a revenue package, but he
declined to detail what's in the package under consideration. There's no guarantee it will be passed before
lawmakers leave Harrisburg for the summer.
As Pa. budget becomes law, some
legislators cry foul
WHYY Newsworks BY KATIE MEYER JULY 12, 2016
Pennsylvania officially has a
budget.
The $31.5 billion spending plan
is in effect as of midnight on Monday, without Gov. Tom Wolf's signature. But
negotiations continue on the revenue plan to back it up. Deadline notwithstanding, lawmakers did seem
to have a productive day of talks on the spending plan. Senate GOP spokeswoman Jennifer Kocher called
the progress "encouraging." She said it seems likely a vote could
come soon. "Because of what came
out of today's meeting as far as everyone feeling good about the direction of
talks, we decided to keep our members around for another day," she said.
House Majority Leader Dave Reed,
R- Indiana, said the next 24 hours will be crucial. However, one conservative contingent in the
House was not happy with the progress. A
group of 20 Republican members signed a letter to the governor saying he could
not let the unbalanced budget slide into law.
Pa.
lawmakers wrangling over how to pay for budget
Morning
Call by Marc Levy, Mark Scolforo Of The Associated Press July 12, 2016 8:55 pm
HARRISBURG — State government
began operating Tuesday under a $31 billion election-year spending bill that
nevertheless lacks the tax collections to sustain it for the entire fiscal
year, and lawmakers say they are scrambling to fix that before it draws a
lawsuit or bond downgrade. Tuesday was
expected to be crucial in determining whether the tax-averse Legislature
controlled by huge Republican majorities will pass a tax increase to fully fund
the spending bill and help shore up the state government's deficit-riddled
finances. But Tuesday came and went with
no major tax legislation unveiled, amid closed-door wrangling over hundreds of
pages of budget-related legislation and open disputes about taxes and
Republican efforts to pave the way for more charter school slots in the cash-strapped
Philadelphia School District. "There's
still some issues out there that we're trying to work through," said House
Majority Leader Dave Reed, R-Indiana. "You always have issues that
are still going to be out there until the moment you're ready to go."
Editorial: It’s time to pay the piper in
Harrisburg
Delco Times POSTED: 07/12/16,
4:42 AM EDT | UPDATED: 18 HRS AGO
There will be no repeat of last
year’s nine-month budget debacle in Pennsylvania. That’s the good news from Harrisburg.
Surprised? If that’s the case, relax.
Some things in the capital have not changed.
We still don’t know how we’re going to pay for it all. That’s actually not a new concept in
Harrisburg. These folks are quite adept at spending. Picking up the tab is
another matter. Sunday night Gov. Tom
Wolf indicated he would allow the $31 billion spending plan crafted by House
Republicans to become law without his signature. It’s reminiscent of his move
last year to resolve a budget impasse that lasted almost a year, forcing cuts
in social services and pre-school programs, while goading many counties into
withholding tax payments. But there is a
big difference. While the governor said he was taking the action in order to
continue the spirit of cooperation and bipartisan work that led to this budget,
no one seems to know exactly if what he’s done is legal. When he allowed the last budget to become law
it was a finished product. This one is not. We know how much we’re spending,
we’re just not sure how the state plans to pay for it.
Still no deal on
Pennsylvania budget as another deadline passes
Lancaster Online by the LNP
Editorial Board July 12, 2016
THE ISSUE: The Pennsylvania
Legislature remains at an impasse over how to pay for a $31.5 billion spending
bill it has already approved. Among the sticking points are a proposed tax on
cigarettes and the expansion of gambling. Gov. Tom Wolf said he would not stop
the spending bill from becoming law.
We knew this looked too easy —
congenial press conferences, a new spirit of cooperation in the state
Legislature, the relatively painless passage of a $31.5 billion spending plan with bipartisan support and before the deadline, of all things. Good stuff for sure and a marked
improvement over what happened a year ago.
It was almost enough to white out the memory of last fiscal year’s
nine-month, record-shattering wrestling match, which ended in an unsatisfying
draw. Almost. Right up until the time when lawmakers needed to come up with the
money they wanted to spend. Then, the visions of gridlock, bickering and an
impotent Legislature incapable of working together hit us like a wet sponge in
the face.
PlanCon advisory committee looks at
flexible approach to school construction projects
|
The PLS Reporter July 13, 2016
PAYWALL
The Public School Building
Construction & Reconstruction Advisory Committee met early Tuesday to
hear an overview of the PlanCon process and discuss possible changes to the
system. The advisory committee was formed under Act 25 of 2016, which was the
Fiscal Code bill accompanying the FY 2015-2016 budget bill that became law
without the governor’s signature in April and is tasked with examining the
PlanCon program, determining its deficiencies, and how it can be improved.
Look for more on The
PLS Reporter HERE.
|
By Molly Born / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette July 13, 2016 12:00 AM
The board of the Pittsburgh
Public Schools discussed a cluster of policies during Anthony Hamlet’s first
public meeting as superintendent Tuesday, including one that would expand a
concept he has pinpointed as one of his priorities. Members will vote on that “community schools”
approach, in which school buildings serve as hubs for social-service programs
for students and families, and the other proposals July 27. The idea was raised in Pittsburgh during a
2013 “envisioning” process that explored ways to address district financial and
academic challenges. Some community schools efforts are already underway: Since
the 2014-15 school year, the nonprofit Homewood Children’s Village has
partnered with Westinghouse 6-12, Faison K-5 and Lincoln PreK-5 to provide
social services in those schools, which serve a high number of students in
poverty. School board president Regina
Holley said the model was one parents and community members asked for and one
children should have access to, even if they don’t attend the schools in their
neighborhood.
Learning English on the job - in school
Inquirer by Janaki Chadha, Staff Writer Updated: JULY 11, 2016 — 1:06 AM
EDT
When Chutong Tan, 21, came to the
United States from China four years ago, she spoke just a few words of English.
After her first day at Solomon Charter School in Chinatown, she was in tears,
said her stepfather, Allan Wong. Solomon
offered no formal language support. Tan soon transferred to Furness High School
in South Philadelphia, and things began to turn around. At Furness, where nearly half of
the students are English language learners (ELLs), Tan said, she felt much more
comfortable. After four years of high
school, Tan was admitted to La Salle University for the fall. But she still
worries that her English proficiency is not up to par, and wishes the language
program at Furness had been more intensive.
"I am panicked," she
said. "I feel like I cannot catch up."
Trib Live BY VINCE
TOWNLEY | Monday, July 11, 2016, 11:39 p.m.
The Pine-Richland School Board
failed Monday to approve two resolutions that would have temporarily set rules
regarding the use of restroom and locker room facilities by transgender
students until it can develop a comprehensive policy. The board's Staff Services Committee has had
five meetings regarding restroom and facility usage by transgender students,
but is not prepared to recommend a comprehensive policy. The board and
administrators could revisit the issue before the start of the school year. But with that new school year approaching,
board member Greg DiTullio proposed a temporary measure that would have given
students the choice of using facilities that correspond to their biological sex
or using unisex facilities.
Lancaster Online by KARA NEWHOUSE | Staff
Writer July 12, 2016
Nine-year-old Jaqaya Smith likes
to read beneath a tree across from her house, not far from Edward Hand Middle
School. She loves books full of adventure. “I don’t really look at the author; I just
really get into reading,” she says. This
summer Jaqaya has a new stash of books to page through under the shade of a
tree’s leafy branches. Her grandmother, Stephanie Smith, signed up Jaqaya and
her brother for Pages on Pedals, a program that delivered free books via
bicycle to 100 Lancaster children. The
Mix at Arbor Place, an after-school program, organized the book distribution in
collaboration with The Common Wheel, a nonprofit bike shop, as a way to promote
learning in the summer months. Education
research has shown that academic losses over the summer, known as “summer
slide,” build up over consecutive years.
To pare down school costs, Pottstown votes
to privatize crossing guards
WHYY Newsworks BY LAURA BENSHOFF JULY 12, 2016
Cities and school districts
looking to cut costs sometimes turn to third-party providers to pare down their
loads — privatizing everything from substitute teachers to cafeteria services.
This week, Pottstown Borough
voted to join Manheim Borough in Lancaster County and Steelton-Highspire School
District in Dauphin County in privatizing management of its crossing guard
corps. Crossing guard positions are
seasonal and part time. They also require morning and afternoon commitments
during the school year that bogart more time than other part-time positions,
said borough manager Mark Flanders.
NEW NATIONAL POLL: Majorities Of Trump And
Clinton Supporters Unite On Early Childhood Education
First Five
Years Fund July 12, 2016
Washington, D.C. – In an otherwise polarized
election, 90 percent of voters – including 78 percent of Trump supporters and
97 percent of Clinton supporters – agree that Congress and the next president
must make quality early childhood education more accessible and affordable to low-
and middle-income families. The poll released today by the First Five
Years Fund (FFYF) found that by a three-to-one margin, voters
prefer the next president be someone who focuses on solutions to the country’s
problems, and they’ve identified investment in early childhood education as an
important solution. Key voter groups want the federal government to help states
and local communities improve access to quality early childhood education –
this includes 85 percent of Hispanics, 79 percent of suburban women, 65 percent
of moderate/liberal Republicans, and 58 percent of Republican women.
“Early childhood education isn’t
a partisan issue, and today’s poll demonstrates that Americans of all political
stripes are united in their demands to make quality early childhood education
more accessible and affordable,” said Kris Perry, Executive Director of the
First Five Years Fund. “Candidates looking to connect with voters should be
hearing loud and clear that Americans see a need for quality early learning,
ranking it a top priority alongside education broadly and good-paying jobs.”
Groups Say Democratic Platform Would
Reverse Key Obama Testing Policies
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Alyson Klein on July 12,
2016 12:24 PM UPDATED
Parents should have a right to
opt their children out of standardized tests, without penalties for their
schools, according to excerpts from a revamped version
of the Democratic Party platform released by the American Federation of
Teachers. What's more, test
scores shouldn't be used to "falsely and unfairly label students of color,
students with disabilities and English-language learners as failing,"
determine which schools are closed, ordefunded, or in teacher and principal evaluations. That portion of the platform can be seen as
an almost total rejection of the Obama administration's K-12 agenda, at least
for the first six years of the administration. Former U.S. Secretary of
Education Arne Duncan made dramatic school improvement strategies (based
largely on test scores) and test-based teacher evaluations a cornerstone of his
K-12 agenda, both through the Race to the Top grant competition and, later,
waivers from parts of the No Child Left Behind Act.
Democrats make education revisions to 2016
platform — and a key reformer is furious
Washington Post Answer Sheet
Blog By Valerie
Strauss July 12 at 11:46 AM
In an
unexpected move, Democrats have revised the K-12 education section of their
party’s 2016 platform in important ways, backing the right of parents to opt
their children out of high-stakes standardized tests, qualifying support for
charter schools, and opposing using test scores for high-stakes purposes to
evaluate teachers and students. Some of
the changes are being welcomed by public school advocates who have been
fighting corporate school reform, which includes standardized test-based
accountability systems and the expansion of charter schools. Many of these
activists have been worried that Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic
nominee, would back corporate reform, just as the Obama administration has.
While it isn’t clear exactly what she will do if she becomes president — as
platform language does not necessarily translate into policy — supporters of
those reforms are furious at the changes, highlighting a rift in the party over
how to improve K-12 education. One of
them, Shavar Jeffries, president of the Democrats for Education Reform, an
influential political action committee supported heavily by hedge fund managers
favoring charter schools, merit-pay tied to test scores and related reforms,
issued a statement that went so far as to say that the original draft on
education was “progressive and balanced” but that the new language “threatens
to roll back” President Obama’s education legacy. (See full statement below.)
SPLC
LAWSUIT: MISSISSIPPI CHARTER SCHOOL FUNDING VIOLATES STATE CONSTITUTION
Souothern Poverty Law Center July
11, 2016
Mississippi is funding its
charter schools through an unconstitutional scheme that diverts public tax
dollars from traditional public schools, according to a lawsuit
filed today by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The lawsuit calls for the court to strike
down the funding provisions of the Mississippi Charter School Act (CSA). The
Mississippi Constitution requires schools to be under the supervision of the
state and local boards of education to receive public funding. But under the
CSA, charter schools receive public funding even though they are exempt from
the oversight of the state Board of Education, the Mississippi Department of
Education, and local boards of education.
Charter schools in Mississippi are accountable to the Mississippi
Charter School Authorizer Board, a body that receives 3 percent of the
public funding that goes to charter schools.
“A school operating outside the authority of the state board of
education and the local school board cannot expect to receive public taxpayer
money,” said Jody Owens, managing attorney for the SPLC’s Mississippi office.
“The state constitution is clear on this matter.”
Kansas Lawmakers Move Forward After
Funding Showdown
Education Week State Ed Watch By Daarel
Burnette II on July 11, 2016 4:33 PM
Kansas' supreme court late last
month backed off its threat to shut off state funding after the legislature at
the last minute figured a way to provide more than $38 million to its poorest
districts. But while that resolved the equity part of the Gannon V. Kansas case,
the court is expected to rule later this year on the adequacy part of the
lawsuit. Last week, the court announced that it
would hear that case Sept. 21. That means a decision could come down
before this year's November elections, when a large portion of the state's
lawmakers are up for reelection. Losing the adequacy case—in which
four districts argue that the state doesn't provide all of the state's
districts enough money to help students meet its own learning standards—could
cost the state more than $500 million.
Meanwhile, a bipartisan committee organized by the legislature
recently began vetting changes to make to the state's current funding
formula.
Diane Ravitch’s Blog By dianeravitch July 11, 2016 //
The New York Times published an
article about how critics of public schools now call them “government schools.”
This is supposed to conjure up an image of a faceless, unaccountable
bureaucracy, like the IRS, not your neighborhood public school whose teachers
you know well. I first heard this term used at
the Hoover Institution. At first I didn’t know what they were talking about,
then I realized that the public schools were, in their minds, “government
schools,” a heinous institution that should be replaced by private schools,
vouchers, religious schools, charters, home schooling, anything but those hated
“government schools.” I began to wonder if they referred to highways as
“government highways” and found a way to avoid them; if they referred to public
parks as “government parks,” to be avoided or privatized; if they referred to
public beaches as “government beaches.”
Appointment
of Voting Delegates for the October 15th PSBA Delegate Assembly
Meeting
PSBA Website June 27, 2016
The governing body boards of all
member school entities are entitled to appoint voting delegates to participate
in the PSBA Delegate Assembly to be held on Saturday,
Oct. 15, 2016. It is important that school boards act soon to appoint
its delegate or delegates, and to notify PSBA of the appointment.
Voting members of the Delegate
Assembly will:
1. Consider and act upon proposed
changes to the PSBA Bylaws.
2. Receive reports from the PSBA
president, executive director and treasurer.
3. Receive the results of the
election for officers and at-large representatives. (Voting upon
candidates by school boards and electronic submission of each board’s votes
will occur during the month of September 2016.)
4. Consider proposals recommended by
the PSBA Platform Committee and adopt the legislative platform for the coming
year.
5. Conduct
other Association business as required or permitted in the Bylaws, policies or
a duly adopted order of business.
The 2016 Delegate Assembly will meet on Saturday,
Oct. 15, at the conclusion of the regularly scheduled events of the
main PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference.
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.
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:
PA Supreme Court sets Sept. 13 argument
date for fair education funding lawsuit in Philly
Thorough
and Efficient Blog JUNE 16, 2016 BARBGRIMALDI LEAVE A COMMENT
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