Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 4000 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, school solicitors, principals, 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, Instagram 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 Feb 10, 2017
How
can schools keep kids fed and focused in Philly, which has the highest poverty
rate among big U.S. cities?
EPLC's "Focus on Education" TV
Program on PCN - this Sunday, Feb. 12 at 3 p.m.
Part 1:
Guest will be: Pedro A. Rivera, Pennsylvania Secretary of Education
Part 2: Guests will be:
Dr. Mark DiRocco, Executive Director, Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators
Jay D. Himes, Executive Director, Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials
Dolores M. McCracken, Vice President, Pennsylvania State Education Association
Mark B. Miller, President, Pennsylvania School Boards Association
Part 2: Guests will be:
Dr. Mark DiRocco, Executive Director, Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators
Jay D. Himes, Executive Director, Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials
Dolores M. McCracken, Vice President, Pennsylvania State Education Association
Mark B. Miller, President, Pennsylvania School Boards Association
Food for thought
How can schools keep kids fed and
focused in Philly, which has the highest poverty rate among big U.S. cities?
The notebook by Dan Hardy February 9,
2017 — 2:22pm
Wayne Grasela, head of the
District's Food services program, says that for many children, school
breakfasts and lunches are the only meals they get for the day. Imagine a Philadelphia family of four trying
to pay for food, housing, transportation, clothes and utilities on an income of
just $24,300, or $16,020 for a family of two. That’s the federal poverty limit. And that’s the reality facing thousands of
the city’s children. About 37 percent of them live at or below the poverty
line. Now, imagine trying to get by on
half that. “Deep poverty” is half the
poverty limit, and 17.8 percent of Philadelphia’s children – 63,500 – live in
families at that income level. Philadelphia has long had the unhappy
distinction of having the highest child poverty rate of any large city in the
country. Given that grim reality, the
breakfasts, lunches and afterschool meals served by the District – free to all
children since the 2014-15 school year – are vital ways for children to stave
off hunger. All public schools and students are automatically included; parents
don’t have to fill out any paperwork.
Pension crisis draining away school
resources educators say
Pottstown
Mercury By Bob Keeler, bkeeler@21st-centurymedia.com, @bybobkeeler on Twitter POSTED: 02/08/17, 7:33 PM
EST | UPDATED: 8 HRS AGO
SOUDERTON >> Few issues
facing public schools are more vexing than escalating pensions costs. During a recent press conference at Souderton
Area School District’s E. M. Crouthamel Elementary School, school officials
from around the region offered their views on, among other things, how rising
pension costs are handicapping their district’s finances and drawing resources
away from educating children. Lawrence
Feinberg, a board member in Delaware County’s School District of Haverford
Township and a “circuit rider” for The Campaign for Fair Education, said
pension costs have “skyrocketed,” to more than a billion dollars statewide. Worse yet, pension reform proposals that have
been raised thus far — most often altering future pension plans for new hires
from a ‘defined payment’ to a ‘defined contribution’ 401-K-type plan — do not
have an immediate impact to cut the costs, he said. Yearly pension costs for the Upper Moreland
Township School District have increased from $1.3 million a decade ago to $6.9
million of the district’s $63 million budget and are continuing to rise,
Matthew Malinowski, the district’s business manager, said. The increased pension costs are equal to the
cost of the district hiring 129 more employees, he said. “It’s clear pension reform must take place,”
Malinowski said. Attendees at the press
conference also included representatives of the Cheltenham, Colonial, Upper
Perk, Upper Merion, Pottsgrove and Springfield Township school districts and
Montgomery County Intermediate Unit 23.
Area educators call for reform of charter
school funding
Pottstown
Mercury By Bob Keeler, bkeeler@21st-centurymedia.com, @bybobkeeler on Twitter POSTED: 02/08/17, 7:33 PM
EST | UPDATED: 7 HRS AGO
SOUDERTON >> A recent
gathering of education officials in Souderton addressed a number of troubling
trends and one of them was charter schools.
During the press conference, held at the district’s E. M. Crouthamel
Elementary School, Souderton Schools Superintendent Frank Gallagher said the
General Assembly needs to reform the laws governing charter schools —
particularly the funding of charter schools.
The Souderton district pays $2.5 million per year for students attending
the brick and mortar Souderton Charter School Collaborative, he said. “This amounts to millions of
dollars coming out of our operating budget,” Gallagher said. “I’m not suggesting they close.
They do good work. They get good results,” Gallagher said. If the charter school were to
close, though, the district would probably only have to hire two more teachers
at a cost of about $200,000 per year, compared to the $2.5 million per year now
being paid, he said. Along with
reforming the way charter schools are funded, there should be changes to
increase the amount of oversight, he said.
Palisades school board will oppose passage
of SB76
Bill would replace property tax with income and sales taxes
Bucks County
Herald by CLIFF LEBOWITZ February 9, 2017
Citing major unresolved
state-based issues regarding pensions and charter school costs, Palisades
School District board members have called for active opposition to proposed
state legislation that would have property tax funding be replaced by increases
in state income and sales taxes. Board
Treasurer Bob de Groot, during his Pennsylvania School Board Association
liaison report at the district’s Feb. 1 public meeting, called for residents to
telephone state Sen. Bob Mensch at 215-541-2388 to voice their opposition to Senate bill
SB76. Board Vice President Bob Musantry
added that while he was “not at all against looking into other ways of funding”
public school districts, the primary need was instead to address serious “money
drains out there that have not been fixed.” No other board member added any
comment about the proposed legislation. Regarding
charter schools, de Groot claimed they had been remiss in responding to state
Department of Education information requests related to the state School
Performance Profile (SPP) and the state’s plan to comply with the federal Every
Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).“We make ours public, and they hide theirs,” he stated.
http://www.buckscountyherald.com/news_stories/2-9-17/Palisades-will-oppose-passage-of-SB76.html
Educators at forum question drive to kill
school property taxes
Pottstown
Mercury By Bob Keeler, bkeeler@21st-centurymedia.com, @bybobkeeler on Twitter
POSTED: 02/08/17,
2:42 PM EST | UPDATED: 7 HRS AGO
SOUDERTON >> Proposed state
legislation to do away with school property taxes has “laudable objectives,”
including helping senior citizens and others on a fixed income, according to
Wissahickon School District Superintendent James Crisfield. “But it’s mixed in with a really nefarious,
unstated subtext, which is a desire on the part of some to reduce spending on
education. Both aspects need to be recognized and addressed separately in the
open,” Crisfield said. He was speaking
Monday, at press conference at Souderton Area School District’s E. M.
Crouthamel Elementary School featuring officials from area school districts who
want to address the rarely discussed impacts of eliminating property taxes,
among other things. A proposal to replace school
property taxes with an increase to state income tax and sales tax rates and
adding to the items on which the sales tax is paid was narrowly defeated in the
Pennsylvania Senate last year, but is believed to have enough votes to pass
this year.
York
Dispatch Opinion by Eric Wolfgang, Springettsbury Township12:56 p.m. ET Feb. 9, 2017
As Pennsylvania faces continued
budget challenges for the coming fiscal year, every dollar matters,
particularly for students in our public schools. Yet, legislators are trying to
tinker with the budget in a way that would negatively impact public schools
across the commonwealth. House Bill 250 would add $50 million (to $175 million)
to the existing Education Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) and $25 million (to $75
million) to the Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit (OSTC) programs. The state is challenged to close an estimated
$716 million revenue on this year’s budget, and is looking at a growing
structural deficit at nearly $3 billion. Now is not the time for the General
Assembly to redirect tax dollars into programs that largely benefits private, nonpublic
schools. These programs shift limited
state funds away from public school districts, by siphoning valuable dollars
from the general fund, via tax credits that could otherwise be used for public
schools. As a result, millions of dollars will not be available to fund the
basic education subsidy that goes to school districts to provide instruction
and educational services for the 1.8 million students in public schools.
Times Tribune BY ROBERT SWIFT, HARRISBURG BUREAU CHIEF / PUBLISHED: FEBRUARY 10, 2017
HARRISBURG — State spending can
be trimmed by $50 million if school districts control student transportation
costs better and put bus contracts out for competitive bidding, Wolf
administration officials say. Gov. Tom
Wolf’s proposed state budget for fiscal 2017-18 would provide nearly $500
million for student transportation, which is $50 million less than the current
level. School districts, intermediate units and career and technology centers
transport more than 1 million students a year.
State Budget Secretary Randy Albright said the $50 million cut reflects
potential savings from changing a distribution formula dating to the 1970s, in
an effort to reward efficiency. The governor hasn’t proposed a
specific replacement formula yet. Mr. Albright said the existing one doesn’t
reflect lower gasoline prices and a decline during the past decade in the
number of students being transported. Meanwhile, the number of buses has
increased, according to budget documents.
WITF Written by Katie Meyer, Capitol Bureau Chief | Feb 8, 2017 10:48 PM
(Harrisburg) -- Governor Tom Wolf's budget plan relies heavily on $2 billion in cuts and savings, as well as a slew of new tax revenues the administration says will add up to about $1 billion. Like any initial plan, those numbers are estimates. Some GOP leaders in the legislature have already raised early concerns about the accuracy of Wolf's projections. Independent Fiscal Office director Matthew Knittel said some concerns might be valid. The IFO puts out a formal budget report in April, but Knittel said based on some cursory analysis, there are a few areas where revenues could definitely be inconsistent. One is the governor's proposed severance tax on natural gas drilling. Estimated at nearly $300 million, it's a significant part of the revenue package.
Education Funding - Where Will the Money
Go?
WBRE/WYOU
By: Jayne
Ann Bugda Posted: Feb
09, 2017 06:05 PM EST
Updated: Feb
09, 2017 06:45 PM EST
WILKES-BARRE, LUZERNE COUNTY
(WBRE/WYOU) State lawmakers are going over the spending package offered
up by Governor Wolf earlier this week. That plan increases funding for
education..but does it go far enough?..Some local school district officials say
no..lead I-Team Reporter Andy Mehalshick.
The Wilkes-Barre Area School District will see an increase in
state funding this year but, much of that money will not be spent on educating
students.. Brian Costello- is the
Superintendent of Wilkes-Barre Area School District, he told Eyewitness News "This upcoming school year we expect to see approximately $1.6 million
dollar increase from charter schools, pension and healthcare. Although we
welcome additional increase in money the district will receive unfortunately it
does fall short to be able to cover those expenses." The Hazleton Area School District is in a
similar situation.. it too will see about a one million dollar increase
in state funding .But like Wilkes-Barre, a big chunk of that will go toward
pensions...
“While DeVos may not have
explicitly endorsed teaching intelligent design in public schools, there is
ample evidence that she and her family cotton to the
notion. DeVos and her family have donated millions of dollars to
organizations that are still pushing intelligent design, despite it being
discredited in federal court. Her husband, Dick, advocated the teaching of
intelligent design when he ran for governor of Michigan in 2006. (He
lost.) They have donated money to the Thomas More Law Center, a Christian
law group that represented the Dover school board. The idea that promoting
intelligent design to allow students to exercise critical thinking is something
that promoters of this idea have pushed from Day One. Of
course, Stough said, it does the opposite by short-circuiting
critical thinking by muddying the very definition of science.”
Dover ID case plaintiff
worries about DeVos (column)
York
Daily Record by Mike
Argento , margento@ydr.com 9:04 a.m. ET Feb. 9, 2017
Ten years after Dover School District in York County was brought
into the national spotlight in a federal trial involving science, religion and
education, the implications of the Dover trial are still being felt in science
classrooms across the US.
Steve Stough thought it
had been settled more than a decade ago.
It certainly seemed that way. After a 40-day trial in federal court, the
notion of intelligent design as a substitute for, or alternate theory of,
evolution was sent home in a body bag, eviscerated by U.S. Middle
District Judge John Jones III. He had
attended the trial; he was among the 11 parents who brought the suit
against the Dover Area School Board, which had tried to introduce the idea that
some supernatural force was responsible for designing life on this planet. The
board had an administrator read a statement to students that
there were "gaps" in the theory of evolution and recommended the book
"Of Pandas and People," a poorly written and researched tome
promoting intelligent design.
Beaver County Times By Katherine
Schaeffer kschaeffer@timesonline.com
AMBRIDGE -- More than two years
of contentious contract negotiations could be drawing to a close for the
Ambridge Area School District and its teachers union. The two parties have
opted to start a process designed to break bargaining stalemates by giving a
panel of three arbitrators a chance to weigh in with a final contract
recommendation. During the process, called last best offer, nonbinding
arbitration, both parties submit what they deem their last best contract offer
to a panel of three arbitrators: one selected by the district, another selected
by the union and a third, neutral arbitrator chosen by the other two. The
arbitration panel will review the contract offers and recommend one of three
options: the school district's proposal, the union’s proposal or last year's
fact-finding result. The district’s 189 teachers have been working under the
terms of an expired contract since June 30, 2015, and the two groups have been
bargaining since January 2015.
Millcreek schools reject contract
recommendations
Millcreek Township School District has been negotiating with
custodians since January 2016 but proposes subcontracting all custodial
services.
GoErie By Valerie Myers valerie.myers@timesnews.com
February 9, 2017
Millcreek Township School
District has rejected a fact finder's recommendations for a contract agreement
with custodians. The central issue in negotiations has been whether the
district will continue to employ custodians. The school district has proposed
subcontracting custodial services beginning in 2018. The district currently
employs 47 full-time and four part-time custodians represented by the Millcreek
Education Support Professionals Association PSEA/NEA union. A provision in
their contract prohibits the district from subcontracting custodial jobs. The district hopes to hire a
private custodial firm to save money, said Mark Wassell, attorney for the
school district. "Based on our research, we believe that subcontracting
services could save $900,000 per year. That's obviously something the school
board is taking a look at," Wassell said.
By Elizabeth Behrman / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette February 9, 2017 4:19 PM
The director of maintenance for
the Butler Area School District is the latest person to resign amid a
controversy surrounding lead and E coli contamination in an elementary school
well. Glenn Terwilliger resigned today,
according to a statement posted to the district website. Superintendent Dale
Lumley resigned Sunday night. No explanation was given in either case. The contaminants were discovered in the water
well serving Summit Elementary School in Summit Township, and many have
expressed concerns about timely reporting of the problem. On Jan. 20, the school district announced
that students and staff at the elementary school were instructed not to drink
the water from the well on the property due to lead contamination. Subsequent
testing also discovered that E coli, an infectious bacteria, also was
contaminating the water.
Lindback Foundation celebrates 10 years of
honoring Philly District teachers and principals
The notebook by Amy Xu February
9, 2017 — 10:12am
This year, the Lindback
Foundation will celebrate 10 years of honoring District teachers and principals
through its annual awards. The Christian
R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation will grant seven awards to principals and 60
awards to teachers. District teachers of all grades will be eligible this
year, a move that expands eligibility from previous years, when the
award was only given to high school teachers.
Applications for the Lindback awards are now open. Nominations for
the Lindback Distinguished Principal Award are due by 5 p.m. Feb. 10, and
nominations for the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teachers are due by 5
p.m. March 10. Since 2007, the Lindback
Foundation has given about $2.7 million to outstanding principals and
teachers in the District. This year's awards will increase the total to more
than $3 million. The Distinguished
Principal Award includes a $20,000 stipend for the school community, and the
Award for Distinguished Teachers includes a $3,500 stipend. “No one enters this profession to receive an
award, but it is important to honor these incredible principals and teachers
for their commitment to our students,” said Sheldon Bonovitz, a Lindback
Foundation trustee. “Many teachers actually use their no-strings-attached
stipends to help students in their classrooms, which adds to the profound
impact they have had on their school communities.”
Fired employee files whistle-blower suit
against Aspira, says federal probe underway
Inquirer by Martha Woodall, Staff Writer @marwooda | martha.woodall@phillynews.com Updated: FEBRUARY 9, 2017 — 6:42
PM EST
A former accounts payable
coordinator at Aspira has filed a federal whistle-blower suit that claims she
was wrongfully fired by the charter school operator after refusing to
manipulate bookkeeping entries. Juanita
Way also alleges that Aspira Inc. of Pennsylvania fired her in
retaliation for talking to the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in an
investigation into Aspira’s financial practices, including a plan to use
charter school funds to pay medical insurance premiums for people who were not
school employees. The suit, which was
posted on the federal court website Wednesday, was first reported by Fox
29. In a statement Thursday, Aspira
called the allegations “outrageous and completely false,” and said it was
“prepared to vigorously defend itself against these frivolous claims in court,
and we expect to be fully vindicated.”
D.C. elementary school students perform
with Yo-Yo Ma, Joshua Bell
Washington Post By Alejandra Matos February
8 at 2:36 PM
The orchestra students at Bunker
Hill Elementary School plucked and bowed their violins, violas and cellos one
afternoon this week as they performed Duke Ellington’s “C Jam Blues” for
classmates at an assembly. But this was
no ordinary concert. Two special guests joined in: violinist Joshua Bell and
cellist Yo-Yo Ma. The world-famous
musicians spent Tuesday afternoon swaying to the rhythmic sounds of
first-graders beating sangba drums. They watched students act out stories. And
the orchestra students learned how Bell and Ma get rid of nerves during
performances: Ma pretends it’s his birthday party. Bell imagines everyone in
the audience sitting on toilets. “You
played so well,” Ma told about 20 orchestra students during rehearsal for the
assembly. “I love the energy. It was great.”
Ma and Bell visited the Northeast D.C. school through a program known as
Turnaround Arts, which aims to give underperforming schools more resources for
arts and music.
States' ESSA Plans Now Entering the
Legislative Phase
Education Week State Ed Watch
Blog By Daarel Burnette II on February 7, 2017 9:01 AM
As state legislative sessions
forge ahead, you'll start to see states' Every Student Succeeds Act
accountability plans vetted by lawmakers as the new law requires. Unlike for waivers from ESSA's predecessor,
the No Child Left Behind Act, or applications for the Race to the
Top program, the federal government requires state boards of education to show
that state education agencies have conducted "meaningful"
consultation with state legislatures over their ESSA plans. In addition,
governors have 30 days to review a plan before it's submitted to the federal
Department of Education. The
meaningful consultation clause is one both the National Conference of
State Legislatures and the National Governors Association pushed for after the
battles over the Common Core State Standards led to many state politicians
complaining that the standards were implemented without their knowledge.
Integration
Works. Can It Survive the Trump Era?
New York Times Opinion by Thomas B. Edsall FEB.
9, 2017
The 2016 election deepened the
chasm between those voters who believe that the government should address the
problems of the poor and those who are convinced that the government already
provides disadvantaged minorities with too much help, at the expense of the
white working and middle classes. While
the polarized belief systems that exploded in the battle between Trump and
Clinton are driving both policymaking and an invigorated opposition,
researchers continue to provide empirical evidence on the difficult issues of
race, poverty and intergenerational mobility.
Rucker C. Johnson, a professor of public policy at the University of
California, Berkeley, has followed two generations of black families and concluded that
integration has been an effective tool for raising educational levels and
living standards.
Is There an Upside for Democrats in DeVos
as GOP's Face of K-12 Policy?
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Alyson Klein on February
9, 2017 7:53 AM
Democrats could spend a lot of
time fighting brand-new U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos and her
initiatives over the next few years, especially if she tries to make good on
the $20 billion voucher initiative President Donald Trump pitched on
the campaign trail. But her time in the spotlight also has a big potential
upside for them. For one thing, it could energize Democrats and those who
support their vision to open their wallets and pound the pavement for
local, state, and federal Democratic candidates. And that energy would serve
Democrats best where they may need it most right now: in rural, red states with
Democratic senators that are up for re-election in 2018. Democrats have 25 seat
to protect in the mid-term election, including 10 in states that President Donald
Trump won, including Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, and West
Virginia. DeVos' favorite K-12
policy—vouchers—won't do much good in those states, where students have
transportation challenges just getting to regular public schools. (More on that issue here.) And the vulnerable senators—all of whom joined their Democratic
colleagues in voting against DeVos Tuesday—were more than happy to
point that out, setting up the DeVos nomination as an example of Trump
betraying his most-loyal voters.
“Our friends and allies also continue to
plan their work at the state and local levels, while seeking opportunities to
impact federal policy. Our mission at Schott is constant and our work remains
as a funder and advocate to support the systemic changes needed to address the
opportunity gaps faced by poor children and children of color in our public
education system. The massive mobilization, awareness raised over legitimate
concerns about this nominee, and ultimately bipartisan agreement over those
concerns are a testament to the tireless efforts of the education justice
community. Many of the gains we’ve made in public education have come through
such organizing, and our vigilance and continued boots on the ground are needed
as ever.”
After the DeVos Vote: the Fight for Public Education Continues
Schott
Foundation Blog FEBRUARY 8, 2017
Yesterday the Senate voted 50-50,
with Vice President Mike Pence casting the tie-breaking vote, to confirm
Michigan billionaire Betsy DeVos as the 11th U.S. Secretary of Education. The
vote—which followed an overnight session of protest and some support of
DeVos—marked the first time in history a vice president has been called upon to
break a tie on a presidential nomination. The historic vote also followed a
widely publicized groundswell of grassroots opposition to the nomination,
citing among other issues, DeVos’s lack of experience, support of privatization
and unfamiliarity with education policy and practice. At the Schott Foundation we
were clear that DeVos is dangerously unqualified for such an important
position governing our nation’s public schools.
Following yesterday’s confirmation, our grantees and allies in education
justice are speaking loud and clear: the fight for public education and equity
in opportunity for all students continues.
The DeVos Apocalypse
Charters are eroding the
Democratic urban base of teachers and black parents.
Wall Street Journal by DANIEL HENNINGER Feb. 8, 2017 6:44
p.m. ET
The extraordinary battle over Betsy
DeVos’s nomination to be secretary of education is the defining event of the
Trump presidency’s early days. As
presented, the DeVos confirmation appeared to be a standard partisan conflict
between Democrats and Republicans, or in the conventional update, all that’s
good and all that’s Trump. But something
deeper was at stake here, which is why the Democrats raised the nomination for
a second-level cabinet post to a political apocalypse. The person who
introduced Mrs. DeVos at her confirmation hearing was former Democratic Sen. Joe
Lieberman from Connecticut, arguably the last of the unequivocal
Democratic moderates. In the confirmation vote, every Democrat opposed Mrs.
DeVos, including Joe Manchin of West Virginia andHeidi Heitkamp of
North Dakota. The issue presumably at the center of this nomination fight is
the future of the education of black children who live in urban neighborhoods.
Learn more and apply here: https://t.co/jMVOJ71xGI
Drexel
University Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day will be held on February 11 from
10:00AM-2:00PM at the ExCITe Center
New
PSBA Winter Town Hall Series coming to your area
Introducing a new and exciting
way to get involved and stay connected in a location near you! Join your PSBA
Town Hall meeting to hear the latest budget and political updates affecting
public education. Enjoy light hors d’oeuvres and networking with fellow
school directors. Locations have been selected to minimize travel time. Spend
less time in the car and more time learning about issues impacting your
schools.
Agenda
6-6:35 p.m.
Association update from PSBA
Executive Director Nathan Mains
6:35 -7:15 p.m. Networking
Reception
7:15-8 p.m.
Governor’s budget address recap
Dates/Locations
Monday, February 20 Forbes Road Career and Technology Center,
Monroeville
Tuesday, February 21 Venango Technology Center, Oil City
Wednesday, Feb 22 Clearfield County Career and Technical
Center, Clearfield
Thursday, February 23 Columbia Montour AVTS, Bloomsburg
Monday, February 27 Middle Bucks Institute of Technology,
Jamison
Tuesday, February 28 PSBA, Mechanicsburg
Wednesday, March 1 Bedford County Technical Center, Everett
Thursday, March 2 West Side CTC, Kingston
Registration:
Ron Cowell at
EPLC always does a great job with these policy forums.
RSVP Today for a Forum In
Your Area! EPLC is Holding Five Education Policy Forums on Governor Wolf’s
2017-2018 State Budget Proposal
Forum #1 – Pittsburgh Thursday, February 23, 2017 – Wyndham University Center –
100 Lytton Avenue, Pittsburgh (Oakland), PA 15213Forum #2 – Harrisburg Area (Enola, PA) Tuesday, February 28, 2017 – Capital Area Intermediate Unit – 55 Miller Street (Susquehanna Room), Enola, PA 17025
Forum #3 – Philadelphia Thursday, March 2, 2017 – Penn Center for Educational Leadership, University of Pennsylvania, 3440 Market Street (5th Floor), Philadelphia, PA 19104
Forum #4 – Indiana University of Pennsylvania Tuesday, March 14, 2017 – 1011 South Drive (Stouffer Hall), Indiana, PA 15705
Forum #5 – Lehigh Valley Tuesday, March 28, 2017 – Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit #21, 4210 Independence Drive, Schnecksville, PA 18078
Governor Wolf will deliver his
2017-2018 state budget proposal to the General Assembly on February 7. These
policy forums will be early opportunities to get up-to-date
information about what is in the proposed education budget, the budget’s relative
strengths and weaknesses, and key issues.
Each of the forums will take following basic format (please see
below for regional presenter details at each of the three events). Ron
Cowell of EPLC will provide an overview of the Governor’s proposed budget for
early education, K-12 and higher education. A representative of The
Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center will provide an overview of the state’s
fiscal situation and key issues that will affect this year’s budget discussion.
The overviews will be followed by remarks from a panel representing statewide
and regional perspectives concerning state funding for education and education
related items. These speakers will discuss the impact of the Governor’s
proposals and identify the key issues that will likely be considered
during this year’s budget debate.
Although there is no
registration fee, seating is limited and an RSVP is required.
Offered
in partnership with PASA and the PA Department of Education March 29-30,
2017 at the Radisson Hotel Harrisburg - Camp Hill, PA .
Approved for 40 PIL/Act 48 (Act 45) hours for school administrators.
Register online at http://www.pasa-net.org/ev_calendar_day.asp?date=3/29/2017&eventid=63
PA
Educational Technology Exposition & Conference (PETE&C), February
12-15, Hershey Lodge and Convention Center.
PASBO
62nd Annual Conference, March 21-24, David L. Lawrence Convention Center,
Pittsburgh.
Register now
for the 2017 NSBA Annual Conference March 25-27 Denver
Plan to join public education leaders for networking and learning at the 2017 NSBA Annual Conference, March 25-27 in Denver, CO. General registration is now open at https://www.nsba.org/conference/registration. A conference schedule, including pre-conference workshops, is available on the NSBA website.
Plan to join public education leaders for networking and learning at the 2017 NSBA Annual Conference, March 25-27 in Denver, CO. General registration is now open at https://www.nsba.org/conference/registration. A conference schedule, including pre-conference workshops, is available on the NSBA website.
Register
for the 2017 PASA Education
Congress, “Delving Deeper into
the Every Student Succeeds Act.” March 29-30
SAVE THE DATE LWVPA Convention 2017 June
1-4, 2017
Join the
League of Women Voters of PA for our 2017 Biennial Convention at the beautiful
Inn at Pocono Manor!
Save the Date
2017 PA Principals Association State Conference October 14. 15, 16, 2017
Doubletree
Hotel Cranberry Township, PA
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.