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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup Feb 21, 2017
Primer
on PA Tuition Tax Credits: Vouchers in Disguise
Gerrymandering: @FairDistrictsPA will be
featured on @WITF's Radio Smart Talk on
Tuesday, Feb. 21 at 9 am, rebroadcast at 7 pm.
The Senate budget hearings will be held in Hearing Room 1 in the North Office Building, and the House hearings will be in Room 140 of the Main Capitol Building.
Monday, March 6, 2017 House: 10:00AM Department of Education
Tuesday, March 7, 2017 Senate: 10:00AM: Department of Education
2017-2018 Budget Hearing Schedule
PoliticsPA Written by Paul Engelkemier, Managing Editor February 20, 2017
Governor Tom Wolf delivered his budget address two weeks ago, now the State Senate and House will kick off their side of things. Over the next three weeks, both Appropriations Committees will hear from all of the departments and groups who receive state funding.
In his budget address Wolf struck a tone of working together. How the members of the Appropriations Committees respond to this during the hearing may be a window into how the 2018 election will be played out. PoliticsPA has combined both schedules to show what each side will be hearing each day
http://www.politicspa.com/2017-2018-budget-hearing-schedule/81683/
Did you catch our weekend and President’s
day postings?
PA Ed Policy Roundup Feb 19, 2017
“money misspent pushing minority students from high school into
college instead of into vocational programs”
PA Ed Policy Roundup Feb 20, 2017
Charter Advocacy Groups Want Higher Standards for Online-Only
Schools
http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.blogspot.com/2017/02/pa-ed-policy-roundup-feb-20-charter.html
PA: How Much Does Your District Pay in Charter Costs
Curmuducation Blog by Peter Greene Friday, February 17, 2017
An extremely handy spread sheet has been circulating lately, and if nothing else, I want to put a link here so that I can more easily find it. If you're in Pennsylvania, you'll want to look at this, too. The document covers every school year from 2009-2010 through 2014-2015 for every single one of our 502 pubic school districts (yes, that is a high number, but that's another conversation). It shows how much money left the district to go to charters, broken down by nonspecial education students and special education students (the pay rate is different). I recommend that you browse on your own, but let me hit just a couple of points.
http://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2017/02/pa-how-much-does-your-district-pay-in.html?spref=tw
"There is definitely more momentum behind tuition tax credits," notes Matt Jacob, spokesperson for People for the American Way. "They have the same effect as vouchers, but they don't scare the public as much." Or, as Joe Overton of the ultra-conservative Mackinac Center for Public Policy said in explaining why Michigan conservatives are focusing on tuition tax credits after that state's voucher referendum failed miserably in 2000: "In Michigan, the word 'voucher' is radioactive. Tax credits are much more politically viable."
Reprise 2003: Keeping Public Schools Public
Tuition Tax Credits: Vouchers in Disguise
Rethinking Schools By Barbara Miner Winter 2002/2003
I have been writing about vouchers for more than a decade. Hardened as I am to often arcane voucher debates, three words still send shivers into my brain. Tuition tax credits.
Please, don't stop reading. Yes, taxes scare everyone. And only nerdy policy wonks - you know, the ones with plastic pocket protectors in their shirts and combination watch/calculators on their wrists - like to talk about taxes. But as they say, death and taxes are two things you can't avoid in life. Since you can't avoid the controversy about tuition tax credits, you might as well learn a little. And I promise I won't make any references to obscure tax codes (such as Form B, page 3A, line 2C, if you said "no" on line 8 on page 5.) If you think tuition tax credits aren't worth worrying about, think again. While there are only three voucher programs - in Cleveland, Milwaukee, and a statewide program in Florida - there are six statewide tuition tax credit schemes, and most passed in recent years.
http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/voucher_report/v_tax172.shtml
Reprise 2012: EDUCATIONAL TAX CREDITS ARE OFTEN A BAIT-AND-SWITCH
Third & State Blog Posted by Stephen Herzenberg on May 23, 2012 2:19 pm
A story in Monday's New York Times explores the use of state tax credit programs to pay for "scholarships" for students who attend private schools. The story suggests that many of the students who receive such scholarships already attend private school and are not low-income. To the extent that this is true, the political marketing of these programs as alternatives (for a select few students) to public schools in distressed communities is a "bait and switch." Educational tax credits actually siphon taxpayer dollars to subsidize private schools, reducing state revenues available for public schools. Is this how the scholarships to attend private schools work under Pennsylvania's Educational Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) program? Probably: there is no prohibition on EITC scholarships going to students already attending private schools; middle-class families are eligible to receive scholarships (the income limit for a family of four is $84,000); and there is no evidence that even this income limit is enforced. In fact, Pennsylvania's Act 46 of 2005 prohibits the state from requesting from scholarship organizations any information other than the number and amount of scholarships that they give out. I guess we're just supposed to trust the scholarship organizations to self-enforce the income limit.
http://thirdandstate.org/2012/may/educational-tax-credits-are-often-bait-and-switch
Reprise 2012: Public Money Finds Back Door to Private Schools
New York Times By STEPHANIE SAUL MAY 21, 2012
When the Georgia legislature passed a private school scholarship program in 2008, lawmakers promoted it as a way to give poor children the same education choices as the wealthy. The program would be supported by donations to nonprofit scholarship groups, and Georgians who contributed would receive dollar-for-dollar tax credits, up to $2,500 a couple. The intent was that money otherwise due to the Georgia treasury — about $50 million a year — would be used instead to help needy students escape struggling public schools. That was the idea, at least. But parents meeting at Gwinnett Christian Academy got a completely different story last year. “A very small percentage of that money will be set aside for a needs-based scholarship fund,” Wyatt Bozeman, an administrator at the school near Atlanta, said during an informational session. “The rest of the money will be channeled to the family that raised it.” A handout circulated at the meeting instructed families to donate, qualify for a tax credit and then apply for a scholarship for their own children, many of whom were already attending the school. “If a student has friends, relatives or even corporations that pay Georgia income tax, all of those people can make a donation to that child’s school,” added an official with a scholarship group working with the school. The exchange at Gwinnett Christian Academy, a recording of which was obtained by The New York Times, is just one example of how scholarship programs have been twisted to benefit private schools at the expense of the neediest children.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/22/education/scholarship-funds-meant-for-needy-benefit-private-schools.html
Blogger commentary:
Education Tax Credits. This is nothing but a way to implement vouchers without using the dirty word "vouchers". Legislation enabling Pennsylvania's EITC and OSTC programs was carefully crafted to circumvent the state constitution's explicit prohibition on tax dollars going to private and religious schools:
Article III § 15. Public school money not available to sectarian schools.
No money raised for the support of the public schools of the Commonwealth shall be appropriated to or used for the support of any sectarian school.
Up to $150 million per year in tax dollars are now diverted to schools that have virtually no fiscal or student performance accountability to the taxpayers. Rep. Turzai's HB250 would increase that by another $75 million. Why do the intermediary organizations that distribute these scholarships get to keep 20% of the money? In Florida they only keep 3%. Ms. DeVos and the Commonwealth Foundation share a common goal; to privatize public education, a common good that has been the foundation of American democracy.
There’s nothing to fear from Betsy DeVos and much to cheer
Lancaster Online Opinion by JAMES PAUL | Special to LNP Feb 19, 2017
James Paul is a senior policy analyst with the Commonwealth Foundation, Pennsylvania’s free market think tank
What child hasn’t heard the story of Chicken Little? His encounter with a falling acorn leads him mistakenly to conclude the sky is falling. Mass hysteria ensues when his friends buy in to his doomsaying. Unfortunately, misguided panic isn’t confined to fairy tales. In the aftermath of Betsy DeVos’ confirmation as secretary of the U.S. Department of Education, opponents predict she could decimate public education. DeVos is a well-known school choice advocate who believes in empowering parents and students with options. Unfortunately, critics view this not as a step forward but as a disaster. Their perspective is misguided, unsupported by facts, and ultimately harmful for the future of American education. But here’s one thing DeVos’ supporters and detractors agree on: Every student deserves access to a quality education. The goal is not in question, only the means. Some believe traditional public schools assigned to students based on their ZIP code can meet every student’s individual needs — every time, in every town in America, in every situation. Advocates of choice, though, believe traditional public schools work well for some students, but public charter schools, private schools, cyber schools, home schools, or some combination of these work best for others. And proponents of choice have the evidence on their side. Indeed, when educational options increase, students perform better, traditional public schools improve, and taxpayers save money. For proof, look no further than Pennsylvania's highly popular Educational Improvement Tax Credit and Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit programs, which allow businesses to direct a portion of their tax liability to fund scholarships to families dissatisfied with their assigned public school. Since 2001, more than 500,000 such scholarships have been awarded.
http://lancasteronline.com/opinion/columnists/there-s-nothing-to-fear-from-betsy-devos-and-much/article_418b1f68-f479-11e6-99b2-b71c9df6f403.html
PA’s EITC and OSTC programs are
administered by DCED, not PDE….
Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program (EITC)Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development Website
Tax credits to eligible
businesses contributing to a Scholarship Organization, an Educational
Improvement Organization, and/or a Pre-Kindergarten Scholarship Organization.
The REACH Foundation is a leading
evangelist for Pennsylvania’s education tax credit programs…. “REACH Alliance was instrumental in the drafting, passage, and
recent expansions of Pennsylvania’s landmark Educational Improvement Tax Credit
(EITC) program.”
The
REACH Foundation
The
REACH Foundation (Road to Educational Achievement Through CHoice)
and its sister organization, the REACH Alliance, are Pennsylvania’s grassroots
coalitions dedicated to ensuring parental choice in education. In 1991, REACH was founded to coordinate the
efforts to pass school choice legislation in Pennsylvania. Since then, REACH
has grown into a broad, diverse coalition that includes members from the
business community, ethnic and religious organizations, parents, and taxpayer
groups. As a non-profit, REACH is governed by an independent board of directors
and funded through generous contributions of Pennsylvania citizens, churches,
and foundations. As the school choice
movement has changed, so has REACH. In addition to school vouchers, REACH
advocates and educates the public on the benefits of tuition tax credits,
charter schools (including cyber charter schools) and home schooling. REACH Alliance was instrumental in the
drafting, passage, and recent expansions of Pennsylvania’s landmark Educational
Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) program. Since passage of the EITC, the REACH
Foundation has worked with the state Department of Community and Economic
Development to create user-friendly guidelines for the program and has assisted
scholarship organizations with start up money and technical assistance. REACH continues to educate Pennsylvania
citizens and the General Assembly to ensure that parents have a true choice in
their children’s education.
Senator under fire for comment about
pushing 'inner-city' students to vocational programs, not college
Penn Live By Jan Murphy |
jmurphy@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
February 20, 2017 at 8:24 PM, updated February 20, 2017 at 9:26 PM
The chairman of the state Senate
Education Committee has come under fire for comments he made last week at a
town hall where he is reported to have said "inner-city" minority
students should be pushed toward vocational programs instead of college. Sen. John Eichelberger, R-Blair County, said
public funds were being misspent pushing them to go to college, according to a story that appeared in The Sentinelof Carlisle. "They're pushing them toward college and
they're dropping out," Eichelberger said at the town hall meeting in
western Cumberland County. "They fall back and don't succeed, whereas if
there was a less intensive track, they would." Eichelberger told The
Inquirer and Pittsburgh Post Gazette on Monday his comments were taken
out of context. He said he was referring to the poor schooling that inner-city
students receive.
Key Pa. senator under fire for suggesting
inner-city students need 'less intensive' program to succeed
Inquirer by Karen Langley & Angela Couloumbis - Staff Writers Updated: FEBRUARY 20, 2017 —
7:13 PM EST
HARRISBURG – An influential
Pennsylvania state senator was under fire Monday for comments suggesting that
minority students in “inner city” public schools struggle to succeed in college
and should instead be encouraged to pursue vocational careers. “They’re pushing them toward college and
they’re dropping out,” Sen. John Eichelberger, a Blair County Republican, said
during a town hall last week near Carlisle. “They fall back and don’t succeed,
whereas if there was a less-intensive track, they would.” Eichelberger, who chairs the Education
Committee, said Monday that his comments, as reported in the Carlisle Sentinel,
were taken out of context. He blamed failing urban school systems — not
their students’ skin color — for why some graduates falter in college. “They are because of their academic
background,” he said in an interview. "They aren’t because they're black.
It doesn’t matter what the color of their skin is. It matters that they had 12
years of very poor school.” His
publicized remarks drew fire from Democratic colleagues, who called them
demeaning and alarming for someone with influence over educational policies for
the state.
Post Gazette Letter by PATRICIA KLINE JUST February 21, 2017 12:00 AM
While perusing the PG’s
Weekender, an ad for an event at the Carnegie Science Center caught my eye.
“Enjoy a FREE small popcorn during opening weekend courtesy of AGORA Cyber
Charter School,” declared the bold text. Smaller text noted that “Film
sponsored locally by Agora Cyber Charter School.” Aren’t charter schools publicly funded? Why
are my taxes being used to distribute free popcorn at the Carnegie Science
Center and to sponsor films, even an educational film, about engineering? I have nothing against educational films or
popcorn, but I do object to the insidious way that the charter school industry,
and it is an industry, tries to inject itself into the mainstream using public
funds.
“And when a charter chain aggressively
lobbies to take over a public school, parents are pitted against each other.
Surely that is no one’s choice. What
follows is just such a story — that of Philadelphia’s John Wister Elementary, a
neighborhood school replaced by a charter, and how that replacement tore a
community apart.”
A cautionary tale about the fight over a
charter school and the effect on a community
Washington Post Answer Sheet
Blog By Valerie
Strauss February 21 at 5:00 AM
President
Trump and his new education secretary, Betsy DeVos, have made clear that their
interest in education is pushing more school “choice” — charter schools,
vouchers, etc. There are consequences to choice policies, though, and this
post explains how the spread of charter schools can affect traditional public
schools, the ones that educate the vast majority of America’s schoolchildren. This
cautionary tale from Philadelphia was written by Carol Burris, a former New
York high school principal who is executive director of the nonprofit Network
for Public Education. She was named the 2010 Educator of the Year by the School
Administrators Association of New York State, and in 2013, the same
organization named her the New York State High School Principal of the Year.
She has been chronicling problems with corporate school reform for years on
this blog, including with a series about troubled charter schools in
California.
TRIBUNE-REVIEW | Monday, Feb.
20, 2017, 10:21 p.m.
The East Allegheny School Board
on Monday approved a plan to create a charter school at the former Westinghouse
Elementary School in Wilmerding. The
board voted 6-3 to approve the proposal for Westinghouse Arts Academy Charter
School — a performing arts school for students in grades 9 to 12. Plans call for the charter school to open for
the 2017-18 school year. The school would be only the third of its kind in
southwestern Pennsylvania, along with Pittsburgh CAPA and the Lincoln Park
Performing Arts Charter School in Midland, Beaver County. The building will be
owned and renovated by developer RPA Holdings LLC at a cost of about $8 million
to $10 million. About 50 people attended
a hearing about the proposal at the district office board room. Many expressed
support for the project, which has faced opposition from the local teachers
union.
Post Gazette By Anne Cloonan February 20, 2017 9:28 PM
The East Allegheny school board
approved the creation of the Westinghouse Charter School for the Arts in the
former Wilmerding Elementary School by a 6-3 vote Monday night. School directors who voted for the charter
school included board president Gerri McCullough, vice president Frank Pearsol,
Alan Eichler, Lisa Green, John Savinda and Stephen Volpe. Voting against the
proposal were Jacqueline Gates, Michael Paradine and Connie Rosenbayger. The vote will allow a group of
retired educators and others to create a high school for the performing arts in
the building, which also formerly housed Westinghouse High School in
Wilmerding. The proposal had been
controversial, with Wilmerding residents and officials supporting the plan,
which they say will help revitalize Wilmerding.
By Molly Born / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette February 20, 2017 9:01 PM
Advocates renewed calls Monday
for a new approach to how the city school district disciplines its youngest
students, a matter the school board president called a “primary goal” to
address. Representatives from the
Education Rights Network and the Education Law Center, a legal advocacy group,
and parents asked again this year for an end to out-of-school suspensions or
expulsions for nonviolent conduct for students in preschool through fifth grade
in the Pittsburgh Public Schools. “We
know both from our data and our experience that students of color and students
with disabilities are still disproportionately excluded from [PPS],” even
though children of color are not more prone to misbehavior, said Cheryl
Kleiman, executive director of the Education Law Center in her testimony at the
board’s regular public hearing Monday night.
Central High teacher succeeds in funding
campaign for billboard
A sign targeting city and school
leaders will go up Feb. 27 on I-95.
The notebook February 20, 2017 —
10:46am
It took Central High School
teacher George Bezanis less than a week to raise the money he needed to
erect a billboard on Interstate 95 pointing out that the teachers' union does
not have a signed contract and highlighting the role that city and school
officials have played. Bezanis holds the
School Reform Commission, Schools Superintendent William Hite, and the mayor
responsible for the fact that District teachers have been working without a
contract since 2012, resulting in lost wages and teachers leaving to
take jobs elsewhere. The billboard
will appear on I- 95 southbound on the right, at a prime location between the
Girard Avenue and Central Philadelphia exits beginning Feb. 27, according to a
news release that Bezanis sent to the media.
Beaver County Times By J.D. Prose
jprose@calkins.com Feb 17, 2017
A Blair County state senator is
once again pushing legislation that would allow Pennsylvania’s 500 school
districts to bypass local newspapers and post their legal ads in several other
ways, including on district websites. Republican
state Sen. John Eichelberger’s Senate Bill 374 was introduced last week, with
state Sens. Elder Vogel Jr., R-47, New Sewickley Township, and Kim Ward,
R-Westmoreland County, as co-sponsors. Bills
such as the one introduced by Eichelberger have been regularly unveiled in the
House and Senate in recent years by several legislators, with Eichelberger last
attempting one in 2013. Under his bill,
school districts could forgo placing legal ads in newspapers of general
circulation and allow them to publish ads in a district newspaper, a legal
newspaper circulated in the district, or on school district, newspaper or
community newspaper websites. “Elimination
of this mandate will provide needed relief to school districts by helping them
better manage their legal advertising costs,” Eichelberger told colleagues in a
Jan. 11 co-sponsor memo. “In these
difficult economic times, school districts need the ability to exercise maximum
flexibility and the discretion to manage their costs,” he wrote. “Additionally,
print advertising is expensive for school districts.”
“Harner put together a list of budget
"pressure points" that total $8.15 million to explain the numbers.
The most significant spikes are in retirement costs ($1.4 million), existing
and new debt service (more than $1.3 million), Bucks County Intermediate Unit
services ($1.1 million) contracted salary increases ($941,732), books
($839,091) and $401,100 for mandated positions to aid students with
disabilities.”
Budget 'sticker shock' has Quakertown school district seeking
spending discipline
Intelligencer By Gary
Weckselblatt, staff writer February 20, 2017
Year after year, the Quakertown
Community School District has come in under budget under the leadership of
Superintendent William Harner. Now with
the school board committed to limiting any tax increase to the 2.9 percent Act
1 index and not wanting to dig too deeply into savings, Harner is being called
upon to cut a preliminary budget that is nearly $11 million more than the
district intends to spend in 2016-17. "One
of the problems is sticker shock," Charles Shermer, chairman of
Quakertown's finance committee told administrators. "To be fair, the whole
team has been really good managing expenditures. You've bought it under every
year. But to see a $10 million bump, that's a problem. These first looks at the
budget have got to be done with a sharper pencil because it scares the hell out
of me." Shermer was concerned that
a jump in spending would threaten the district's ability to borrow for its $134
million master capital plan, spread out over 13 years for affordability, to
build two schools and renovate others. He
called for more time "to pare down the gap" between the current
$102.1 million budget and the 2017-18 preliminary budget of just under $113
million.
Citizens Voice BY MICHAEL P. BUFFER / PUBLISHED: FEBRUARY 20, 2017
Gov. Tom Wolf’s proposed budget
would help the Wilkes-Barre Area School District, but difficult financial
decisions on future spending are still coming, Wilkes-Barre Area Superintendent
Brian Costello said. “We are encouraged
with the proposed budget and the governor’s strong commitment to education,”
Costello said. The proposed budget would
increase state funding to Wilkes-Barre Area by $1.1 million, but projected
increases in health care costs and pension contributions are expected to cost $1.6
million in 2017-18, Costello said.
York
Dispatch by Alyssa Pressler , 505-5438/@AlyssaPressYDPublished 3:18 p.m. ET Feb.
20, 2017
·
The state Department of Education will move forward with planning
for ESSA, despite the incoming administration.
·
ESSA was bipartisan, though Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos have not
shared their thoughts on the statute.
·
ESSA will replace No Child Left Behind and return control to
states and local school districts.
In December 2015, President
Barack Obama signed into law the Every Student Succeeds Act, the successor to
No Child Left Behind and the strict standards many districts struggled to meet.
It's now up to a new
administration to actually roll out the new accountability program, and that
has some wondering what the act will look like under President Donald Trump and
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. No
Child Left Behind was the nation's primary means of measuring school
accountability. It required every student in the country be proficient, which
means performing at grade level, in math and reading by 2014. The law, which
went into effect in 2002, increased the percentage of students who should be
scoring proficient incrementally each year.
As the standards continued to
increase, it became obvious schools would never achieve 100 percent of students
score proficiently on standardized tests, so in 2012 Obama began to allow
states to opt out of the law. A bipartisan effort to replace No Child Left
Behind was begun, and ESSA was the result. ESSA gives states and individual
school districts more control over how they measure student success, so each
state must submit a plan of how they will do so.
WITF Written by The Associated Press | Feb 17, 2017 5:39 AM
(Philadelphia) -- Tax revenue data released from the School District of Philadelphia shows ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft have brought in more than $44 million in their first two months of legal operation in the city. The Philadelphia Inquirer reports the district said Thursday it received nearly $358,000 in tax revenue from the July-to-September period during which the companies operated under a temporary authorization that then included a 1 percent tax per ride. In November, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf signed a bill that allowed ride-sharing companies to operate legally in the state. The legislation levied a 1.4 percent tax on each ride provided through the companies' apps. The school district receives two-thirds of that. It expects the industry to generate between $2 million to $2.5 million for the city's schools annually.
Transgender
Legal Update (Feb. 15, 2017)
PSBA Website Feb 15, 2017For many years, PSBA has urged its members to work with transgender students and their families to meet the needs of individual students and to provide them with a safe and supportive school environment. In addition to continuous updates on the law, PSBA has provided in depth training and materials on practical ways to accommodate transgender students. However, there are lawsuits pending in Pennsylvania and the United States that still must be decided before we know whether Title IX can be used to protect individuals from discrimination based on gender identity. Some of these cases have been in the news in recent weeks and interim orders have been issued. Links to these orders are found at the end of this article.
League
of Women Voters to hold luncheon with lawmakers
Observer Reporter February
19, 2017
League of Women Voters of
Washington County will hold its luncheon with area state lawmakers later this
month. The Friday event – intended as an
information session with legislators who represent parts of the county – will
feature a period during which the group will ask legislators questions and the
opportunity for guests to speak with their elected officials. The event will begin at 11:30 a.m. at
Presbyterian Senior Care chapel, 835 S. Main St., North Franklin Township. The luncheon is open to the
public. To make a reservation, call 412-892-9484. The cost to attend is $15. To date, Sen. Camera Bartolotta, R-Carroll;
Rep. John Maher, R-Upper St. Clair; Rep. Bud Cook, R-West Pike Run and Rep.
Brandon Neuman, D-North Strabane, are scheduled to be in attendance. Questions will cover redistricting reform,
election reform to improve ballot access, education funding and policies to
encourage investment in clean energy.
School
mergers were plentiful in the ’60s
Washington County Observer
Reporter By Rick Shrum February
18, 2017
In early August, three weeks
before classes were to begin, a small group of parents attended a Monessen
School Board meeting. Two mothers, contending the district provided limited
educational and extracurricular options, urged the directors to consider a
merger with another district. That
request did not go far. Dr. Leanne Spazak, the superintendent, told the board
previously she had studied mergers and discovered, in many instances, some
students ended up with even fewer academic programs and activities from which
to choose. She concluded that a merger is feasible only under dire
circumstances. “If we can ever not
sustain ourselves financially and we are not providing our students with what
we consider a quality education, then (a merger) would be my recommendation,”
she said. Monessen School District, with
a 7 percent decline in students since 2011, remains Monessen School District.
And may continue to do so. Public school
district mergers are almost a thing of the past in Pennsylvania – the very
distant past. There has been only one since the court-ordered Woodland Hills
merger in 1981. That occurred in Beaver County, when Center and Monaca came
together in 2009.
“Betsy DeVos, the newly installed secretary of
education, is an ardent campaigner for privately run schools and has investments in for-profit educational ventures. While Ms. DeVos’s nomination attracted a
flood of attention, most was focused on the K-through-12 system and the use of
taxpayer-funded vouchers for private, online and religious schools. Higher
education was barely mentioned during her confirmation hearings.”
For-Profit
Schools, an Obama Target, See New Day Under Trump
New
York Times By PATRICIA COHEN FEB. 20, 2017
Since Election Day, for-profit college companies
have been on a hot streak. DeVry Education Group’s stock has leapt more than 40
percent. Strayer’s jumped 35 percent and Grand Canyon Education’s more than 28
percent. You do not need an M.B.A. to
figure out why. Top officials in Washington who spearheaded a relentless
crackdown on the multibillion-dollar industry have been replaced by others who
have profited from it. President Trump
ran the now-defunct Trump
University, which wound up besieged by lawsuits from former students and
New York’s attorney general, who called
the operation a fraud. Within days of the election, Mr. Trump, without
admitting any wrongdoing, agreed to a
$25 million settlement.
Feeling Slighted, District of Columbia
Teachers Fire Back at Betsy DeVos
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Alyson Klein on February
18, 2017 6:00 PM
Earlier this month, U.S.
Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos made her first visit to a public school,
Washington, D.C.'s Jefferson Middle School Academy. Protestors tried to block her from going in
the door, but she made it inside and talked to teachers, school leaders, and
Antwan Wilson, the chancellor of the District of Columbia Public Schools.
After emerging from the school, DeVos pronounced it "awesome." But in an interview with a conservative
columnist, Cal Thomas of Townhalll, DeVos described her visit this way:
I visited a school on Friday and met with some wonderful, genuine, sincere
teachers who pour their heart and soul into their classrooms and their
students and our conversation was not long enough to draw out of them what is
limiting them from being even more success from what they are currently. But I
can tell the attitude is more of a 'receive mode.' They're waiting to be told
what they have to do, and that's not going to bring success to an individual
child. You have to have teachers who are empowered to facilitate great
teaching. Jefferson's teachers did not
take kindly to DeVos' contention that they're waiting to be told what to do.
They fired back at DeVos on Twitter Friday night:
Stand Up for PA's Public School Students!
Sign up for Education Voters PA
email list
Join activists throughout
Pennsylvania as we fight to ensure that ALL students have access to educational
opportunities in their public schools that will prepare them for graduation and
success in life. Add your voice to
thousands of others who are standing up against efforts to privatize and weaken
our children’s public schools. Help us create strong public demand for a strong
system of public schools that will offer an opportunity to learn for ALL
students.
The
PASA-PASBO report on School District Budgets, January 2017
Public
Education Funding Briefing; Wed, March 8, 2017 8:30 AM – 10:00 AM at United Way
Bldg in Philly
Public
Interest Law Center email/website February 14, 2017
Amid a contentious
confirmation battle in Washington D.C., public education has been front and
center in national news. But what is happening at home is just as--if not
more--important: Governor Wolf just announced his 2017-2018 budget proposal,
including $100 million in new funding for basic education. State legislators
are pushing a bill that would eliminate local school taxes by increasing income
and sales taxes. And we at the Law Center are waiting on a decision from
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court as to whether or not our school funding lawsuit
can go to trial. How do all of
these things affect Pennsylvania's schools, and the children who rely on
them? Come find out! Join
Jennifer Clarke, Michael Churchill and me for one of two briefings on the nuts
and bolts of how public education funding works in Pennsylvania and how current
proposals and developments could affect students and teachers. (The content of
both briefings will be identical.) The briefings are free and open to the public, but we ask that you please RSVP.
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
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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