Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 3900 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors,
administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's
staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, Wolf education transition
team members, Superintendents, PTO/PTA officers, parent advocates, teacher
leaders, business leaders, faith-based organizations, labor organizations,
education professors, members of the press and a broad array of P-16 regulatory
agencies, professional associations and education advocacy organizations via
emails, website, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn
These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup August 26, 2016:
Cyber
tuitions too high? When they sell the Florida condo, the plane, the farm, the
houses for his mother & girlfriend - do we get our tax dollars back?
Southeastern PA Regional 2016 Legislative
Roundtable: William Tennent High School (Bucks Co.) SEP 22, 2016 • 7:00 PM -
9:00 PM
More
info & Registration: https://www.psba.org/event/2016-legislative-roundtable/
WBAL News Radio Associated Press Wednesday, August 24 2016
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The founder and former CEO of an online public school that educates thousands of Pennsylvania students pleaded guilty Wednesday to federal tax fraud, acknowledging he siphoned more than $8 million from The Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School through for-profit and nonprofit companies he controlled. In entering his plea, Nicholas Trombetta, 61, who headed the school, acknowledged using the money to buy, among other things, a Bonita Springs, Florida, condominium for $933,000, pay $180,000 for houses for his mother and girlfriend in Ohio, and spend $990,000 more on groceries and other items. He manipulated companies he created and controlled to draw the money from the school, also spending it on a $300,000 plane, Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Kaufman said. Trombetta was making $127,000 to $144,000 annually at PA Cyber when he ran the illegal tax evasion scheme from 2006 to 2012. He faces up to five years in prison when he's sentenced Dec. 20. By running the money through the companies or their straw owners, Trombetta avoided income taxes, though prosecutors haven't said how much. Most of the siphoned money was squirreled away in Avanti Management Group, which functioned as Trombetta's retirement savings account, Kaufman said.
Trombetta Guilty Plea Sparks Cyber School Funding Questions
KDKA Pittsburgh August 25, 2016
7:49 PM By Andy Sheehan
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — Pa.
Cyber Charter School founder Nick
Trombetta‘s guilty plea may prompt a closer look at the operation of
charter schools across the state and cyber charters in particular. State Auditor General Eugene DePasquale has
already launched an audit of Pa. Cyber to determine if it’s operating above
board after Trombetta. “There’s no
question that what has happened in Midland is a lot of money, and it’s coming
from somewhere and we’re going to find out where it’s going to,” DePasquale
said. The question of where the money to
fund cyber charters comes from is easy to answer. It’s from school property
taxes, but bigger question is, are we paying too much? When a child opts out of your local brick and
mortar school for an online education, your local school district pays an
average of about $10,000 a year to the cyber school.
But DePasquale says that’s about
$5,000 or $6,000 more than what’s required since cyber schools have no grounds
to maintain or secure and no athletic teams to field.
U.S. Attorney David Hickton said
that excess led to corruption in Midland.
“It’s obviously cheaper to
educate these children on a charter platform that these sums are going to build
up,” Hickton said. The feds contend that
Pa. Cyber was awash in excess cash that spread to other entities created by
Trombetta, who was accused of syphoning off $8 million in cash, even buying a
corporate plane, a Florida condo and expansive real estate holdings.
Charter school funding disputes stuck in
limbo: See your district's appeals
Penn Live By Wallace McKelvey
| WMckelvey@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
August 25, 2016 at 2:01 PM, updated August 25, 2016 at 3:24 PM
Over a two-year period between
2012 and 2013, the York City School District disputed more than $3 million in
fees from the New Hope Academy Charter School.
Pennsylvania's Department of Education, the same agency that declared
York's schools financially distressed in 2012, was responsible for ensuring
those disputes were resolved in a timely fashion. But the York district's appeals remain open
and unresolved to this day, even as New Hope closed and its operator moved on
to open a new charter school in Delaware.
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said Thursday that it's unlikely York
— now under the supervision of a recovery officer — will ever recoup those
millions of dollars, even if the department ruled in its favor. "The consequences of that are
disastrous," he said, as he detailed the failings of the state's system
for funding charter schools and handling appeals.
York
Daily Record by Angie Mason,
amason@ydr.com5:15
p.m. EDT August 25, 2016
A state audit concluded the process to dispute payments to charter
schools is too lengthy and confusing.
A state audit found the York City
School District had millions in contested charter school payments waiting for
state action, but the district said it's resolved most of the issues directly
with the charter schools involved. State
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale recently reviewed the process by
which districts can dispute payments to charter schools and found that
of 857 appeals filed during the five-year audit period, 74 percent
remained open as of December. The audit
notes that some of the matters might have been settled locally, but the
state hasn't followed up and closed the cases.
Among them were nine York City School District appeals related to
payments to New Hope Academy Charter School, now closed, and Lincoln
and Thackston charter schools. The disputed amounts totaled more than
$5 million dating back to 2012.
“The division is expected to conduct
comprehensive audits and reviews that will precede the cyber charter renewal
process.”
PA Charter Schools To Get More Support And
Scrutiny With New State Oversight Group
WESA 90.5 By MARK NOOTBAAR • 14
HOURS AGOThe Gov. Tom Wolf administration announced the Division of Charter Schools within the state Department of Education on Wednesday. Its four staffers will be tasked with providing additional support and supervision of Pennsylvania's more than 150 charter schools statewide.
Gov. Tom Wolf created a new charter
school oversight body through the state Department of Education on Wednesday,
nearly two years after his gubernatorial campaign promised charter reform. The Division of Charter Schools will be
composed of a director, who has yet to be hired, plus three staffers. They're
tasked with making sure the laws, processes and information already in
place are followed, and that the data charter schools submit to the department
is accurate and timely, Wolf spokesman Jeff Sheridan said. “To this point, there really has not been any
oversight to ensure that that is happening,” Sheridan said. The division is also responsible for posting
financial and other data online, monitoring student achievement and increasing
site visits. Sheridan said the governor will also continue to work with the
legislature to implement reforms to the system but the division will have some
policy goals regarding education programming and achievement and growth
measures. “Student participation and
attendance, and review and monitor compliance when it comes to school
improvement plans,” Sheridan said.
Pa. Department of Education enhancing
oversight of charter schools
WHYY Newsworks by Kevin McCorry August
25, 2016 — 12:09pm
Gov. Wolf of Pennsylvania
announced Wednesday that he's beefing up the state's oversight of charter
schools by creating a new division within the Department of Education that is
devoted solely to the sector. "Charter
schools play an important role in our education system, but that role must be
accompanied by sufficient oversight," Wolf said in a statement.
"Establishing this new division within the Department of Education will
allow us to maximize our resources to not only ensure charters are being
properly supported, but that they are being held accountable to
taxpayers." The Wolf administration
says the new division will more rigorously monitor the fiscal and academic
integrity of charters. "Establishing
a division within the Department is the next step to further streamline
communication with charter schools, help ensure they receive needed technical
assistance from the Department, and ensuring that all public schools in the
commonwealth are held to the same high-quality standards," said state
Education Secretary Pedro Rivera in a statement. Wolf spokesman Jeffrey Sheridan said the move
would simply bring the charter sector oversight in line with the oversight
that the department gives the state's 500 traditional districts.
“Atiyeh, who did not respond to multiple
requests for comment, has become one of the greatest advocates of local charter
schools. He owns three buildings used by
charter schools in the Lehigh Valley – Innovative Arts, Arts Academy Elementary
Charter School at 601 Union St., Allentown, and Arts Academy Charter School at
1610 Emmaus Ave. in Salisbury. Medical Academy Charter School was housed in his
Howertown Road property before closing in June amid discipline and academic
issues. In May 2014, Atiyeh told The
Morning Call he has shelled out "a couple hundred thousand bucks" for
each proposed charter.”
Innovative
Arts Academy Charter CEO cites concerns over 'unethical' financial practices in
decision to leave
Sarah
M. Wojcik and Jacqueline
Palochko Contact Reporters The Morning Call
August 25, 2016
CATASAUQUA — The CEO of
Innovative Arts Academy Charter School, announcing her immediate departure
Thursday, accused the charter school of engaging in "unethical"
practices, including the unauthorized use of her Social Security number. In an email exchange between her and board of
trustee members viewed by The Morning Call, Loraine Petrillo also blasted the
school's financial association with the building's landlord and his companies. Petrillo does not identify the landlord in
the emails. But the building at 330 Howertown Road, Catasauqua, is owned by a
limited liability corporation associated with developer Abe Atiyeh. "For the life of me, I don't understand
why the board is still seeking the landlord or associated company's involvement
in our financing after this past weekend. It might be 'legal' but certainly, in
my humble opinion, unethical," Petrillo wrote. Petrillo's emails, sent Thursday morning,
come in the wake of a controversial, unauthorized mailer that painted
Bethlehem's Liberty High School as a drug-addled place to entice students to
attend the charter school slated to open Sept. 6.
Charter school CEO quits over $100K loan
from landlord Abe Atiyeh
By Sara K.
Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
August 25, 2016 at 10:42 AM, updated August 25, 2016 at 3:24 PM
The CEO of the new Catasauqua
charter school embroiled in controversy over an unauthorized
mailer quit Thursday morning amid concerns about the landlord's
involvement in the school. Innovative Arts Academy Charter
School is set to open Sept. 6 at 330 Howertown Road in a building owned by
developer Abe Atiyeh. About 330 students are enrolled in the grades 6-12
school. On Tuesday, Chief Executive
Officer Loraine Petrilloannounced
she planned to resign once a replacement was found due to concerns
about outside forces undermining her efforts. In e-mail messages obtained by
lehighvalleylive.com Thursday morning, Petrillo announced her resignation was
now effective immediately and raised major concerns about Atiyeh's involvement
in the school and charter school board members' ties to him.
Why does an Atiyeh exec want to know about
Liberty High arrests?
By Sara K.
Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
August 25, 2016 at 3:13 PM, updated August 25, 2016 at 3:28 PM
Days after a mysterious mailer
sparked outrage by slamming Liberty
High School, an employee of developer Abe Atiyeh filed a public records
request seeking 10 years of student arrest records for the Bethlehem school. The mailer promoting the new Innovative Arts
Academy Charter School in Catasauqua references the 2015 drug arrest of a
17-year-old Liberty student accused of having more than $3,000 in heroin and
cocaine in his backpack. The charter
school is leasing its building at 330 Howertown Road from Atiyeh, who also
leases space to several Lehigh Valley charter schools and has helped some get
up off the ground. The mailer reprints a
Morning Call headline after the arrest and asks "Why worry about this type
of student at school? Come visit Arts Academy Charter School. Now enrolling
grades 6-12."
Pa. senator says HBO's John Oliver 'went
too far' with charter school rant
by Tommy Rowan, Staff Writer @tommyrowan Updated: AUGUST 26, 2016 — 5:16
AM EDT
Apparently, as HBO's John Oliver
was poking fun at Pennsylvania's charter school system, Pa. Sen.
Anthony Hardy Williams wasn't laughing.
On Wednesday, Williams (D., Phila.) sent the Last Week
Tonight host a "Dear John" letter, questioning an assertion
on his Sunday show that Pennsylvania's "charter schools are terrible." "I really do enjoy your wit and
informative style," Williams wrote, "but you went too far with
your segment on Pennsylvania's charter schools." On his program Sunday, Oliver
used Pennsylvania laws and Philadelphia schools as examples of why he
believes charter schools are something of gamble when it comes
to education. “Charter schools unite both sides
of the aisle more quickly than when a wedding DJ throws on ‘Hey Ya,’ ”
Oliver said to kick off his piece, further noting that the
first charters emerged 25 years ago as a way to explore
new approaches to education. Earlier
this year, Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said the
state has “the worst charter school law in the United States." Oliver agreed.
“None of Oliver’s critics seriously
refuted the crux of his argument that there might be something fundamentally
wrong by design, rather than by implementation or intent, with the idea
that a “free market” of privately operated and essentially unregulated
schools is a surefire way to improve education opportunities for all students.”
John Oliver Slams Charter Schools And His
Critics Totally Miss The Point
Common Dreams By Jeff
Bryant Published on Thursday,
August 25, 2016 by Education Opportunity Network
Sometimes it takes a funnyman to
make sense. Earlier this week, British
comedian John Oliver devoted a “Back to School” segment on his HBO
program Last Week Tonight to examining the rapidly growing
charter school industry and what these schools are doing with our tax dollars. The Washington Post’s education
blogger Valerie
Strauss watched the segment and reports that while Oliver declined to
address whether or not charters provide high quality education, he focused
mostly on how often these schools are “terribly – and sometimes criminally –
operated.” (You can see Oliver’s entire sketch here.) Editors at Rolling
Stone watched Oliver’s broadcast as well and report Oliver focused
much of his attention on three states – Florida, Pennsylvania, and Ohio – that
have “especially depressing charter track records – including negligence in the
approval process and school executives embezzling funds.”
“For many local school districts,
they’re paying millions more into the school pension system than they were a
few years ago. Some have been able to absorb those costs without repeatedly
raising taxes while others have raised taxes and barely kept pace with rising
costs. In the past decade, property
taxes in Allegheny County’s wealthiest school districts have increased moderate
amounts — 7 to 13 percent — in some and upward of 20 to 45 percent in others. Our analysis focuses on 25 of Allegheny
County’s 43 school districts that are near or above the state’s median
household income of about $53,000. As
PublicSource reported last week, wealthier school districts statewide
were far more likelyto raise
property taxes when compared to poorer districts. They raised taxes, in part, because they
could. Poorer school districts couldn’t raise much money from property taxes,
even if they wanted to.”
Why some Pittsburgh-area school districts choose to raise property
taxes and others don't
All school districts are feeling the pinch of rising pension
costs. Some have responded by repeatedly raising property taxes while others
spare residents with as few tax increases as possible.
By
Eric Holmberg | PublicSource | Aug. 25, 2016
A nice home in a good school
district. If that comes with high property taxes, well, it’s just part of the
deal, right? What if it didn’t have to
be? Over the past decade, some
Pittsburgh-area school districts have raised property taxes every year, blaming
rising pension costs, while others have tried to weather the storm with as few
hikes as possible. A school board’s
budgeting philosophy could result in a homeowner paying thousands more in
property taxes than a similarly-priced house in another school district. That disparity has far-reaching consequences
for long-time residents, young families and newcomers looking for a nice home
in a quality school district. Prospective homebuyers might not
only want to know whether property taxes are low, but also whether the school
district is willing or able to keep them low.
Take two area school districts: Mars and South Fayette. Both spent
roughly $350,000 on pensions, after the state’s reimbursement, in the 2008-09
school year. That increased to about $1.8 million in the 2014-15 school year.
That’s where the similarities end.
Reading School District, teachers agree to
new contract
Reading Eagle By David
Mekeel Thursday
August 25, 2016 12:01 AM
Teachers in the Reading School
District will start the new school year with a contract. That's something that couldn't be said for
quite some time. After working under an
expired pact for 1,452 days — over four years — the Reading Education
Association voted overwhelmingly Wednesday morning to approve a new contract. The Reading School Board, in turn, voted
unanimously at its meeting Wednesday night to do the same. “I'm relieved,” said union President Mitch
Hettinger. “It's been a long time coming.”
The new contract is a seven-year deal, but in practice is actually a
three-year deal. It covers the past four years, and extends to Aug. 31, 2019. The pact includes pay
raises, which average 2.91 percent, for the 1,005 members of the teachers
union. It also includes step and column
movement, which refer to advancement on the pay scale for years of experience
or service to the district, based on the salary schedule.
In exchange, teachers
will increase their contributions to their health care plan.
Garnet Valley reaches new, 4-year deal
with support staff; custodial services to be outsourced
Delco
Times By Susan L. Serbin, Times Correspondent POSTED: 08/25/16, 1:38 PM EDT
CONCORD >> The Garnet
Valley School Board and Garnet Valley Education Support Professionals (GVESP)
have reached a tentative agreement on a new, four-year contract that will give
the support staff raises each year, but calls for the outsourcing of the
district’s custodial services. Details of the new deal will not be released
until it is ratified by both sides. However,
it is known that employees will receive raises in each year of the contract.
The increases begin in the 2016-17 school year. New hires after the effective
date of the agreement will begin on a modified wage scale below the 2015-16
wage rates for employees. In combination with the wage modification, the
parties have agreed to significant changes in healthcare plan designs, premium
contributions, and the introduction of a Qualified High Deductible Plan. Attorney Mark Fitzgerald, the school
district’s labor counsel, issued a statement on the contract status. “In an era of prolonged public
sector labor negotiations, the parties have come together to create four years
of labor peace in the district during continued difficult economic times,
especially in light of the ongoing state pension obligations of public school
employers,” Fitzgerald said.
Bresch, who is the daughter of U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-W.Va), eventually became Mylan’s CEO, and subsequently raised her own salary by 671 percent. And in 2014, Bresch reincorporated Mylan in the Netherlands, utilizing a controversial accounting tactic known as “inversion,” lowering the company’s effective tax rate while still maintaining its headquarters and manufacturing base in the US.”
EPIPEN
MAKER’S STOCK VALUE DROPS NEARLY $3 BILLION IN 5 DAYS AS INVESTORS PANIC
US Uncut Tom Cahill | August 25,
2016
Mylan Pharmaceuticals — the
company behind the price gouging of the EpiPen — is experiencing serious karmic
retribution in the stock market. In just
five days, Mylan’s stock has tanked by 12.4 percent as outrage over its
astronomical price increases of the life-saving EpiPen has reached a boiling
point. Mylan’s stock price went
from a high of $49.20 per share on August 19 to $43.11 on August 24, according
to MarketWatch: As the chart below from
YCharts shows, Mylan’s market cap has been in virtual freefall since last
Friday, falling by almost $3 billion. This crash coincides almost directly with
the news of EpiPen’s price hike spreading nationally and attracting almost
universal scorn, even from the likes of
“Pharma Bro” Martin Shkreli, who famously hiked the price of AIDS
treatment pill Daraprim last year.
In the eyes of the NLRB, charter schools
are private, not public
Albany Times Union By Rick Karlin, Capitol bureau on
August 25, 2016 at 5:14 PM
Here’s an interesting item that
touches on the semantics as well as labor issues surrounding New York’s charter
school movement. A recent ruling by the
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), concludes that charter schools are
private and efforts to start teachers unions in them should fall under their
purview, rather than the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) which
oversees the public sector. The decision
stemmed from efforts by the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) to unionize
teachers at the Hyde Leadership charter school in Brooklyn. PERB had asserted jurisdiction over the
school, but the union ended up arguing that organizing efforts should be
overseen by the NLRB which administers labor law in the private sector. The NLRB in its decision,
concluded that “Hyde was not established by a state or local government, and is
not itself a public school.”
“On average, most spent nearly $500 last
year, and one in 10 spent $1,000 or more. All told, a total of $1.6 billion in
school supply costs is shifted from parents — or, increasingly, from
cash-strapped districts — onto teachers themselves.”
Here’s How Much Your Kid’s Teacher Is
Shelling Out for School Supplies
Time/Money by Martha C. White Aug. 3, 2016
And you thought what you had to pay was bad
Parents might be getting sticker
shock when they see the list of required supplies their kids’ school mails out,
but chances are, teachers are looking at even bigger bills for their classrooms
right about now. The Education
Market Association says that
virtually all teachers wind up paying out of pocket for supplies, and it’s not
chump change, either. On average, most spent nearly $500 last year, and one in
10 spent $1,000 or more. All told, a total of $1.6 billion in school supply
costs is shifted from parents — or, increasingly, from cash-strapped districts
— onto teachers themselves. “What we know from our site coordinators who
work alongside teachers is that these educators are often digging into their
own pockets to stock their classrooms with basic supplies,” said Gary
Chapman, executive vice president for the national network of Communities in
Schools, a nonprofit group that helps low-income kids stay in school.
“Increasingly, it’s also including items that teachers themselves need to do
their jobs, like cleaning supplies, trash bags, and poster boards,” he said.
New book: Obama’s Education Department and
Gates Foundation were closer than you thought
Washington Post Answer
Sheet Blog By Valerie Strauss August
25 at 1:52 PM
Megan
E. Tompkins-Stange is an assistant professor of public policy at the Ford
School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan who has written a highly
revealing book about the power and influence of four major foundations in education-reform
policy in recent years. She researched “Policy
Patrons: Philanthropy, Education Reform, and the Politics of Influence”
over several years, in which she was given access to officials in four
foundations — Bill and Melinda Gates, Eli and Edythe Broad, Ford, and W.K.
Kellogg— as well as permission to quote people without attribution. It would, of course,
be better to know exactly who said what, but Tompkins-Stange is able
nonetheless to give enough context so that the power of the words she recorded
from 60 interviews contributes to the overall narrative. “Policy Patrons” looks
at the effect of the unprecedented philanthropic engagement in public
education reform during the Obama administration and raises questions about
whether democracy is usurped when private individuals use their fortunes to
bend public policy to their own priorities.
Good School, Rich School; Bad School, Poor
School
The inequality at the heart of
America’s education system
The Atlantic by ALANA
SEMUELS AUG 25, 2016
HARTFORD, Conn.—This is one of
the wealthiest states in the union. But thousands of children here attend
schools that are among the worst in the country. While students in
higher-income towns such as Greenwich and Darien have easy access to guidance
counselors, school psychologists, personal laptops, and up-to-date textbooks,
those in high-poverty areas like Bridgeport and New Britain don’t. Such
districts tend to have more students in need of extra help, and yet they have
fewer guidance counselors, tutors, and psychologists, lower-paid teachers, more
dilapidated facilities and bigger class sizes than wealthier districts,
according to an ongoing lawsuit. Greenwich spends $6,000 more per pupil per
year than Bridgeport does, according to the State
Department of Education. The
discrepancies occur largely because public school districts in Connecticut, and
in much of America, are run by local cities and towns and are funded by local
property taxes. High-poverty areas like Bridgeport and New Britain have lower
home values and collect less taxes, and so can’t raise as much money as a place
like Darien or Greenwich, where homes are worth millions of dollars. Plaintiffs
in a decade-old lawsuit in Connecticut, which heard closing arguments earlier
this month, argue that the state should be required to ameliorate these
discrepancies. Filed by a coalition of parents, students, teachers, unions, and
other residents in 2005, the lawsuit, Connecticut Coalition
for Justice in Education Funding (CCJEF) v. Rell, will decide whether
inequality in school funding violates the state’s constitution.
NEW:
Southeastern PA Regional 2016 Legislative Roundtable: William Tennent High
School (Bucks Co.) SEP 22, 2016 • 7:00
PM - 9:00 PM
PSBA website August 25, 2016
Take a more active role in public
education advocacy by joining our Legislative Roundtable
This is your opportunity for a
seat at the table (literally) with fellow public education advocates to take an
active role in educating each other and policymakers. Auditor General Eugene DePasquale, along with
regional legislators, will be in attendance to work with you to support public
education in Pennsylvania. Use the
form below to send your registration information!
2016 National Anthem Sing-A-Long - September 9th
American Public Education Foundation Website
The Star-Spangled Banner will be sung by school children nationwide on Friday, September 9, 2016 at 10:00am PST and 1:00pm EST. Students will learn about the words and meaning of the flag and sing the first stanza. This will be the third annual simultaneous sing-a-long event created by the APEF-9/12 Generation Project. The project aims to bring students together – as the world came together – on September 12, 2001.
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
Registration
for the PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference Oct. 13-15 is now open
The conference
is your opportunity to learn, network and be inspired by peers and
experts.
TO REGISTER: See https://www.psba.org/members-area/store-registration/ (you must be logged in to
the Members Area to register). You can read more on How to Register for
a PSBA Event here. CONFERENCE WEBSITE: For
all other program details, schedules, exhibits, etc., see the conference
website:www.paschoolleaders.org.
The Early Bird Discount Deadline has been Extended to Wednesday, August 31, 2016!
PA Principals Association website Tuesday, August 2, 2016 10:43 AM
To receive the Early Bird Discount, you must be registered by August 31, 2016:
Members: $300 Non-Members: $400
Featuring Three National Keynote Speakers: Eric Sheninger, Jill Jackson & Salome Thomas-EL
PSBA
Officer Elections Aug. 15-Oct. 3, 2016: Slate of Candidates
PSBA members seeking election to
office for the association were required to submit a nomination form no later
than April 30, 2016, to be considered. All candidates who properly completed
applications by the deadline are included on the slate of candidates below. In
addition, the Leadership Development Committee met on June 24 at PSBA
headquarters in Mechanicsburg to interview candidates. According to bylaws, the
Leadership Development Committee may determine candidates highly qualified for
the office they seek. This is noted next to each person’s name with an asterisk
(*). Each school entity will have one
vote for each officer. This will require boards of the various school entities
to come to a consensus on each candidate and cast their vote electronically
during the open voting period (Aug. 15-Oct. 3, 2016). Voting will be
accomplished through a secure third-party, web-based voting site that will
require a password login. One person from each member school entity will be
authorized as the official person to cast the vote on behalf of his or her
school entity. In the case of school districts, it will be the board secretary
who will cast votes on behalf of the school board.
Special note: Boards should be
sure to include discussion and voting on candidates to its agenda during one of
its meetings in September.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.