Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
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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,
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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 14, 2017
Implementing
Community Schools in Philly and Pittsburgh
“Unlike federal data, Pennsylvania’s
campaign finance information is not available in a machine-readable format,
like an Excel file, which can be easily downloaded and analyzed.”
Lawmaker urges Wolf to modernize campaign
finance website
State Impact BY MARIE
CUSICK FEBRUARY 13, 2017 | 1:28 PM
A Democratic lawmaker is calling on the Wolf administration to
overhaul Pennsylvania's archaic campaign finance website.
A Democratic state lawmaker is
calling on Governor Tom Wolf’s administration to modernize Pennsylvania’s
archaic campaign finance website. Rep.
Greg Vitali (D- Delaware) says updating the site would go a long way toward
transparency. Vitali recently published a report on the
natural gas industry, showing what he describes as its outsized political
influence in Harrisburg. He blames the lobbying expenditures and campaign
contributions for stymieing efforts to
enact a gas severance tax and new drilling
regulations. He estimates the gas industry spent more than $7
million last year on lobbying and over $62 million since 2007. Vitali notes it’s incredibly time-consuming
to wade through the campaign finance reports online. The website discourages
journalists from doing real-time analysis, he says, which could show links
between the money and lawmakers’ votes.
Superintendent Anthony Hamlet has
called implementing “community schools” in the district one of his top
priorities, and it’s among the short-term goals the school board set for him.
By Molly Born /
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette February 13, 2017 12:00 AM
The concept of using school
buildings to house social services for students and their families, long
studied in the Pittsburgh Public Schools, is moving closer to reality. Superintendent
Anthony Hamlet has called implementing “community schools” in the district one
of his top priorities, and it’s among the short-term goals the school board set
for him. “I see community schools as, number one, for our children, to make
sure they get supports they need,” he said in a recent interview. “But also, if
we’re not beginning to support our parents in our community, then we send the
kids right back into a possible environment [in which] they can forget some of
the things they learned.” The school board passed a community schools policy in
July, and approved the hiring of a full-time community schools coordinator in
December. A 26-member committee made up of foundation, government, union and
community representatives developed the application for schools, due Friday.
Community Schools: Philly neighborhoods reveal different priorities
After lots of data collection, teams are working to tailor each community school's services to address the needs of its students and residents.
The notebook by Dale Mezzacappa February 13, 2017 — 12:21pm
It was the week before Christmas, and Edwin Rodriguez had just heard Mayor Kenney talk about how the city would be investing new resources in Southwark Elementary School, where his daughter is a 5th grader. He watched as leaders of several organizations that run afterschool programs at Southwark received awards of appreciation. He listened proudly as his daughter, Siani, played in the school’s band. The occasion was to showcase Kenney’s signature effort in K-12 education – an initiative to create 25 “community schools” in the next five years. Southwark, ethnically diverse and in the heart of South Philadelphia, is in the pilot group of nine schools announced in July. Rodriguez, who said he and his family considered moving to South Jersey, but liked Southwark so much that they stayed, is excited about its designation as a community school. And yet, he said, “I’m still trying to wrap my mind around what it means.” The city is nearly a year into a comprehensive, multifaceted process to answer that question. Right now, the Mayor’s Office of Education is helping each of the nine schools and their neighborhoods determine their needs, priorities, and plans of action.
http://thenotebook.org/articles/2017/02/13/neighborhoods-reveal-different-priorities
EITC/OSTC: OPED: Tax credit programs save money and help kids
York
Dispatch Opinion by Otto V. Banks, REACH Foundation and Alliance 4:47 p.m. ET Feb. 13, 2017
Otto V. Banks is executive
director of REACH (Road to Educational Achievement through Choice) Foundation
and Alliance.
In a Feb. 9 op-ed, “PA should
prioritize public education students,” Eric Wolfgang writes that he believes
every dollar matters. I couldn’t agree more. Unfortunately, he alleges that
“legislators are trying to tinker with the budget in a way that would
negatively impact public schools across the commonwealth.” That is where he and
I part ways. House Bill 250 would add $50 million to the existing Educational
Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) and $25 million to the Opportunity Scholarship
Tax Credit (OSTC) programs, both of which benefit public and private
schoolchildren. Mr. Wolfgang argues that due to
an estimated $716 million revenue gap and a nearly $3 billion structural
deficit, “now is not the time for the General Assembly to redirect tax dollars
into programs that largely benefit private, nonpublic schools.” This is not
true. The EITC and OSTC programs are designed to benefit children who are
trapped in failing schools such as the Davis School in York, where only 17.5
percent of the students are proficient in English and a mere 6.3 percent are
proficient in math. The scholarship programs provide low-moderate income
children with resources to transfer to another public or private school that
will provide them a high-quality education.
“The way this is written, even using
school meals would count against the family,” she said. The order states that any “aliens,” whether
documented or not, may be considered “inadmissible or deportable” if they use
any benefit “for which eligibility or amount is determined in any way on
the basis of income, resources, or financial need.” Legal immigrants could face
deportation, and their sponsors could be forced to repay the cost of the
benefits.”
Will Trump target the school lunch
program?
Nutrition advocates worry that a
draft executive order seems to take aim at immigrant children who receive free
and reduced-price meals.
The notebook by Bill Hangley Jr. February
13, 2017 — 9:22am
Shaking up childhood
nutrition programs was not one of the many promises that Donald Trump made
on the campaign trail. But the new president and the Republican-controlled
Congress could drive major changes in the way the Philadelphia School District
feeds thousands of students every day. Trimming budgets or eliminating
regulations would be possibilities. But a draft
executive order restricting the use of public benefits by legal
immigrants would be a dramatic change. The draft shows that the Trump
administration is considering changes that could potentially shake
Philadelphia’s universal-access food-service system to its core, imposing
penalties on the families of students who use free and reduced-price lunch. The
exact implications of Trump’s draft executive order are “really unclear,” said
Kathy Fisher of the Coalition Against Hunger. “In terms of the school lunch
[program], I’m unclear how that would work out.” But the draft order is clear
in its intent, Fisher said.http://thenotebook.org/articles/2017/02/13/will-trump-target-the-school-lunch-program
Require bids on bus pacts
TIMES-TRIBUNE EDITORIAL BOARD / PUBLISHED: FEBRUARY 12, 2017
Gov. Tom Wolf could have had the
Scranton School District in mind when he proposed a state budget last week
calling for a $50 million reduction in student busing subsidies. The budget
would still provide virtually $500 million for student transportation, but Mr.
Wolf said funding should be reduced because of falling fuel prices and fewer
students riding buses. Budget Secretary Randy Albright said the reduction will
provide incentives to reward efficiency and boost competition and that school
districts should be required to put bus contracts out to bid. The Scranton
School Board in 2016 violated internal bidding policy to award a four-year
busing contract extension to DeNaples Transportation. School officials praised
the DeNaples service, but the absence of transparency about the extension
created doubt about its propriety.
“The 2017-18 budget's top cost drivers
contributing to the huge budget hole are: a $3.8 million increase in mandated
employee pension payments; $2.7 million for salaries; $2.6 million for academic
initiatives; $1.5 million for general operations; $1.2 student tuition and
$704,056 in charter school payments. The administration already has cut
$5 million from the preliminary budget, including $2 million of educational
programming, like new curriculum and professional development.”
Bethlehem school board leaves all tax hike
options open
By Sara K.
Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on February 13, 2017 at 9:00 PM, updated February 14, 2017 at 1:34 AM
The Bethlehem
Area school board Monday night voted to keep all options on the table
to help it close a $12.5
million budget gap The board of
school directors voted 7-1 to apply to the state for permission to potentially
exceed its 3.1 percent on annual property tax increases. Director Tom Thomasik
was the lone dissenting vote. Director Shannon Patrick was absent. "I did
it for the people that elected me," Thomasik said of his vote, pointing to
a newsletter detailing how much taxes have gone up in Hanover Township,
Northampton County. he administration wants the district to apply to the state
for permission to potentially exceed its 3.1 percent cap on annual property tax
increases.
“Among the increased expenses the
district faces is $1.8 million in wages and benefits, which is due mostly to
the contract reached with the teachers last year.
He said the district must deal with a
$576,000 increase in pension costs through the Pennsylvania State Employees
Retirement System. In addition, he said the district will have to fork over
$1.3 million in payments to charter schools for district students who opt to
attend them instead of Highlands.”
Highlands staring at $1M budget shortfall
Trib Live by TOM
YERACE | Monday, Feb. 13, 2017, 11:45 p.m.
The Highlands School District is
facing an early estimated budget deficit of $1 million, but district Business
Manager Jon Rupert said the emphasis is on “early,” since the deadline to
approve a 2017-18 school budget is July 1. Rupert updated the school board on
the status of next the upcoming budget Monday night. He said the district
currently is looking at increased expenditures of about $1.8 million over this
school year. However, Rupert said the board could bring in increased revenue to
offset some of that. He said if the board chooses to raise real estate taxes,
it could do so up to a maximum of 3.6 percent under state law.
Springfield OKs preliminary school budget
with tax hike
Delco
Times By Susan L. Serbin, Times Correspondent POSTED: 02/13/17, 9:04 PM EST
SPRINGFIELD >> The school
board approved the 2017-18 proposed preliminary budget of $83.4 million. It
will call for a 2.97 percent increase which complies with the 2.5 percent index
and .47 percent in permitted exceptions. This equates to a 0.905 mill increase,
or $93 per $100,000 of assessed value. The balanced budget reflects an increase
of about $3.5 million from the current year. Nearly the entire amount is due to
three major categories— $1.3 million in salaries and benefits; $1 million in
the PSERS retirement contribution; and $1 million in supplies. Adjustments to
other line items such as professional and property services and financing
constitute the rest in expenditures. In his presentation, Executive Director
Don Mooney said the district has experienced enrollment growth, with 232 new
students over the last five years. The proposed budget will include addition of
one classroom staff and one administrator.
York
Dispatch by Alyssa
Pressler , 505-5438/@AlyssaPressYDPublished 9:21 p.m. ET Feb. 13, 2017
·
The district held a special board meeting on Monday night to
discuss Helen Thackston Charter School.
·
Administrators presented a number of issues, like low achievement
scores and a lack of verified teachers.
Helen Thackston Charter School is
at risk of losing its charter in the coming years after the York City
School District called a special meeting where the district outlined
problems they've noticed for more than two years. Among the issues discussed at Monday's
meeting were troubling test scores, a lack of transparency regarding
finances and little programming related to homeland security, a focus of
the charter school. The district presented a resolution to the school
board outlining each of these problems in detail. The resolution also includes
recommendations and due dates for the school. The resolution states that if the
charter school fails to meet the recommendations by the deadline, the school
board can "revoke or not renew (Helen Thackston Charter School's)
charter."
Commentary: Blame local officials, not
DeVos, for state of Philly schools
Inquirer by Christopher Paslay Updated: FEBRUARY
13, 2017 — 12:09 PM EST
Betsy DeVos is officially the
U.S. secretary of Education, and judging from the reaction of her opponents,
you'd think she was advocating selling underprivileged school children to the
meat market in order to feed rich land owners. Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer (D., N.Y.) insisted Trump's decision to appoint DeVos as Education
secretary should "offend every single American man, woman, and child who
has benefited from the public education system in this country." Vanity
Fair film critic Richard Lawson put it more bluntly, tweeting that her policies
"will kill children" and lead "queer kids" to "more
suicides" because of a lack of access to supports in religious schools. But
if school choice kills, then the Philadelphia School District is Murder
Incorporated. For nearly two decades, establishment Democrats, educational
activists, and financial opportunists have gutted traditional public education
in the city, leaving it permanently altered. The biggest blow to Philly public
schools was cast by then-state Rep. Dwight Evans (D., Pa.) in the late 1990s,
when he fought to pass the Pennsylvania Charter School Law, which opened the
floodgates for school choice and took millions of dollars away from traditional
public schools and pumped them into privately owned charters. Evans also
supported Acts 46 and 83, which enabled Harrisburg to take over the Philadelphia
School District, and replace the local school board with a state-run School
Reform Commission.
Guest Column: Ex-school super’s Top 10
list for determining snow days
Delco
Times By Joseph Batory, Special to the Times POSTED: 02/13/17, 9:07 PM EST
Joseph Batory was the Upper Darby
School District Superintendent of Schools from 1984 to 1999.
As a school superintendent for
more than 15 years, I lived in terror of snow/ice, primarily because I
regularly had to decide whether or not and when to send nearly 100 school buses
into inclement weather. Under Pennsylvania law, the Upper Darby School District
has the responsibility of not only busing its own students who qualify via the
distance requirements, but every other youngster who lived in Upper Darby and
attended a private or parochial school in the tri-county area. So our Upper
Darby buses picked up and/or dropped off many thousands of kids every day and
the winter months were often a nightmare.
What I remember from those years was lots of complaints … no matter what
my decision. School closings especially caused trouble. For 60 to 70 percent of
my Upper Darby students, school each day was a “critical service” since for so
many homes, both parents worked. We also had “before and after school add-ons”
so for working parents, this was a terrific asset … except when schools were
not open, or opened late, or closed early.
WHYY Newsworks BY AVI WOLFMAN-ARENT FEBRUARY 13, 2017
One of the first things you notice when you walk the halls of St. Gabriel school in the Point Breeze section of South Philadelphia is the sound. Or rather the absence of it. A lone teacher's voice drifting out an open door. The sound of someone's shoes clacking along corridors. The still gaze of a religious statuette perched in the corner. Catholic schools tend to be quiet, orderly places. That's part of the appeal. But all that carefully orchestrated tranquility evaporated on a winter day in 2012. "I could just remember we heard shouts throughout the whole school," says long-time teacher Elaine Carboni. "I've never heard a shout as loud." About a month earlier, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia released a Blue Ribbon Commission report on Catholic education in the city that read more like a eulogy. It called for 48 area Catholic schools to close, among them 104-year-old St. Gabriel. It was a rock-bottom moment for Catholic education in the city. But it would birth one of Philadelphia's most interesting education experiments.
PA
Deputy Secretary of Education Matt Stem recently presented a webinar on PA's
new Future Ready PA Index.
PA Principals Association News
& Announcements February 13, 2017
The webinar is approximately 40
minutes long and can be viewed at the link below:
Where school choice isn’t an option, rural
public schools worry they’ll be left behind
Washington Post By Jose A. DelReal and Emma Brown February
10
EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine —
The small parking lot outside of Schenck High School was crammed with cars, all
there for the basketball game, the town’s featured event that night. The cold
winter air whipped around white mounds of snow lining the town’s few
residential streets and past the school to the vast blackness of Interstate 95. This small, remote high school is perhaps
East Millinocket’s last and most crucial community pillar. Even before the
local paper mill shut down three years ago, the town had suffered a stark
economic decline because of the mill’s dwindling profits and the widespread
poverty that followed. With a shrinking tax base and an aging population,
Schenck High faces an uncertain future. Washington
has long designed education policy to deal with urban and suburban challenges,
often overlooking the unique problems that face rural schools like this one.
With a new administration in the White House that prefers “school-choice”
approaches — favoring charter schools and private-school vouchers so parents
can opt out of public schools and bring taxpayer dollars with them — the
nation’s rural schools are left to wonder about their fate. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s emphasis
on school choice means very little out here in the wilds of Northern Maine,
where the closest “good” schools are all impossibly far away. For students
here, Schenck is really the only choice.
Three global indexes show that U.S. public
schools must be doing something right
Washington Post Answer Sheet
Blog By Valerie
Strauss February 13 at 1:01 PM
Nancy
Truitt Pierce is a member of the Monroe School Board in Washington state who
was appointed by Gov. Jay Inslee to his STEM Alliance Advisory Board. In her
day job, she is a consultant who convenes monthly peer group meetings of top
executives in Seattle and hears what they are looking for when recruiting new
employees. What do they want?
Here’s what she wrote in an
email: What I hear from the key corporate leaders I meet monthly with is that
they want candidates coming out of our public schools who are creative,
innovative, collaborative problem solvers. Yes, the candidates must also have
strong foundational skills of math, science and language arts but I suggest we
are putting too much emphasis on the PISA math score as a key indicator of
public school quality. I suggest there are other indicators that would serve us
in much better ways. PISA is the Program for International Student Assessment
in which 15-year-old students in school systems around the world take tests in
several subjects. American students have never scored near the top in this or
any other international test, and the 2015 results were no different, prompting
a great deal of consternation in the United States. (Pierce said she focused on
the math score because that is what comes in for the most scrutiny.) Coming out
on top on the 2015 PISA were kids in Singapore, followed by Japan, Estonia,
Chinese Taipei, Finland, Macao (China), Canada, Vietnam, Hong Kong (China) and
B-S-J-G (China). But a recent
Forbes article points out some of the problems with PISA:
AFT Video Published on Dec 3, 2013 Runtime 5:00
When the OECD releases the PISA
report every three years, many people use the ranking to claim public education
in the U.S. is failing and push their corporate education reform agenda. But
looking at the data, lessons that can be learned from the highest performing
countries point in a completely different direction. For more information: http://go.aft.org/pisa #ReclaimIt
Key House Lawmaker Discusses What's Next
for Federal Education Funding
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Andrew Ujifusa on February 13, 2017 7:24 AM
Local school leaders worried
about potential cuts to major federally funded education programs may find some
comfort in the words of Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., the chairman of the
House appropriations subcommittee that oversees the U.S. Department of
Education budget. In a recent interview, Cole also
stressed that while he has certain ideas about how federal spending on schools
might shape up in the near future, he'll want to get a lot of input first from
President Donald Trump's administration. And he highlighted the importance
of federal spending on students with disabilities. "I think it's
premature" to say definitively that there will be significant cuts to the
Education Department, Cole told us in an interview. "I think that's
certainly a possible outcome, and may be more likely than not." (Check out
our recent story on this issue for more in-depth thoughts from Cole and others watching the education
funding debate.)
Betsy DeVos Tells Her Side to Conservative
Opinion Journalists
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Alyson Klein on February
13, 2017 5:24 PM
In her first print and radio
interviews since taking the helm of the U.S. Department of Education, brand-new
Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos opened up about the difficulties of her
rocky confirmation process to conservative opinion journalists in Michigan. DeVos
gave her first print interview to a Michigan-based
opinion page editor whose paper endorsed her as secretary,
and her first radio interview to Paul W. Smith, a conservative talk show host,
also from the Wolverine State. Smith started his chat with DeVos by telling
her, "you know that we're supportive of you." DeVos' divisive
confirmation process—culminating in a tie vote that Vice President
Mike Pence had to break—was a theme of both conversations. DeVos
told Ingrid Jacques, the deputy editorial page editor of the Detroit News, that
she could have answered some questions in her confirmation hearing "better
or more articulately." But she added, "in my defense, the questioners
had no interest in really hearing a full response, I don't think. I did not
want to be combative. I wanted to continue to be respectful and to try to
reflect the kind of demeanor that I think we should have surrounding these
conversations." And she said the opposition to her candidacy has
"made me more resolute."
NSBAC First 100 Days Campaign #Ed100Days
National School Boards
Action Center
YOUR VOICE IN THE FIRST 100 DAYS!
There is no time like the present
for public education advocates to make their voices heard. Misleading rhetoric
coupled with budget cuts and proposals such as private school vouchers that
divert essential funding from our public schools are threatening the continued
success of our 50 million children in public schools. We need your voice to
speak up for public schools now!
The first 100 days in the 115th Congress
and the Trump Administration present a great opportunity to make sure our
country’s elected leaders are charting an education agenda that supports our
greatest and most precious resource -- America’s schoolchildren. And
you can make that happen.
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
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
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