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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup June 22, 2017:
Contact
your legislators today and urge them to support a $100 million increase in the
Basic Education Funding (BEF) subsidy and a $25 million increase for special education. Show
your legislators the consequences of proposed $50M transportation cuts
Click here to find your members of the Senate and House. When you find your
legislators, click on their names for phone numbers and other contact
information.
PSBA estimates that 164 school districts will receive less money,
even with the proposed $125 million subsidy increases for 2017-18,
if the General Assembly cuts transportation funding.
This chart shows the district-by district impact of the proposed $50 million cut for pupil transportation.
This chart shows the district-by district impact of the proposed $50 million cut for pupil transportation.
The chart shows how much money
each district will receive if the $100 million increase in the BEF and the $25
million increase is enacted, along with how much money each district will lose
with a $50 million decrease for transportation. The final column shows the BEF
and special education funding increase less the transportation decrease. (Please remember that the chart is an estimate that utilizes the best
data available to calculate the funds.)
Join the Campaign for Fair Education
Funding for a news conference at the Capitol 11 a.m. today
PSBA Website POSTED ON JUN 21, 2017 IN PSBA NEWS
The Campaign for Fair Education Funding (CFEF) will be conducting
a news conference this Thursday, June 22, at 11 a.m. in the Capitol
Rotunda to press for a state budget that increases basic education funding by
$100 million without any cuts to other school funding budget lines. The campaign is a statewide effort that began
in 2014 and includes more than 50 education advocacy organizations, including
PSBA, with the common belief that the state must adequately and equitably fund
our schools if every Pennsylvania student is to have an opportunity to succeed. We need a strong showing from all of the
member organizations to underscore the importance of this funding increase to
the legislature and the media. Please
let us know if you are able to attend the news conference. The event should
last no more than 20-30 minutes. RSVP to Jamie.zuvich@psba.org if you can join us at the
Capitol on Thursday.
Pennsylvania legislators are
trying to close the state budget gap without raising new revenue.
Public News Service June 21, 2017
HARRISBURG, Pa. - Education advocates in Pennsylvania are
concerned that a proposed increase in school funding may be in jeopardy. The
budget is due June 30, and the state is facing a $2 billion to $3 billion
budget gap. As lawmakers try to close
that gap without raising new revenue, said Susan Spicka, executive director of
the group Education Voters of Pennsylvania, everything is up for grabs. "We're hearing that Gov. (Tom) Wolf's
proposed $100 million increase in Basic Education Funding is now on the
table," she said, "and that that could be cut or even completely
eliminated from the budget." The
House passed a budget in April that includes the governor's $100 million
increase in school funding. Even that amount, Spicka said, wouldn't begin to
give Pennsylvania kids what they need in their classrooms. "But $100 million is still a lot of
money," she said, "and what it's going to do is allow school
districts to at least not go as far backward as they otherwise might go without
this funding increase." She pointed
out that districts around the state already have incorporated the increase into
their planning. "They've passed
budgets that have counted on at least some of this money," she said,
"and so if this money isn't there when schools come back in the fall, then
school districts are going to have huge holes in their budgets." Advocates have estimated that the state needs
to invest more than $3 billion in education to achieve adequate funding and
restore years of budget cuts to schools.
More information is online at educationvoterspa.org.
More information is online at educationvoterspa.org.
Days
from the deadline, budget indecision in Pa.
Inquirer by Angela
Couloumbis & Karen
Langley, HARRISBURG BUREAUS
Updated: JUNE 21, 2017 — 7:19 PM EDT
HARRISBURG — With less than 10 days to the deadline for a
new state budget, there is talk but little action — and even less agreement —
on how to close a steep budget deficit and fix the state’s fiscal
problems. Gov. Wolf, a Democrat, on
Wednesday strongly signaled skepticism over a plan being discussed by
Republicans who control the state Senate to borrow money to ease the state’s
$1.5 billion shortfall. Top Republicans
in both chambers in turn have dismissed many of Wolf’s proposals to generate
new dollars, including a new tax on natural gas drilling and an expansion of
the state sales tax to items that are currently exempt. And no one involved in budget talks appeared
to be anywhere near figuring out a plan to expand gambling — one of the
proposals that until now all sides indicated would likely be part of any final
budget plan. Muddying the waters further
Wednesday: top legislative leaders sent rank-and-file legislators home for the
rest of the week, setting the stage for a hectic session next week when they
return to the Capitol.
WITF Written by Katie Meyer, Capitol Bureau Chief | Jun 22, 2017 5:15 AM
(Harrisburg) -- House and Senate leaders are preparing to work through the weekend as they try to finish budget negotiations before their June 30th deadline. However, they still have little to say about their negotiations. Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman said the House, Senate, and Governor are close to being on the same page on a relatively austere, $31.8 billion spending plan. But that's the easy part--they still have to figure out a way to pay off this year's $1.5 billion revenue shortfall, plus raise an additional $700 million to actually bring the new budget into balance. The House has proposed a sweeping gaming expansion to close the gap somewhat, as well as privatization of the liquor industry. The Senate favors its own, more modest gaming bill, and has been skeptical of the liquor measure. "I was more optimistic two weeks ago," Corman said when asked about the gaming negotiations. "As I always tell people, nothing's ever dead around here."
No
more excuses - it's time to finish up the state budget: Marc Stier
PENNLIVE OP-ED By Marc Stier Updated
on June 21, 2017 at 9:59 AM Posted on June 21, 2017 at 7:30 AM
Marc Stier is the director of the
Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center, a left-leaning think-tank. He writes
from Harrisburg.
Now that the Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, and the
Republican-controlled General Assembly have reached a deal to
reform public employee pensions, it's time to get to work on the
budget. And, whether you like or don't like the pension deal (like any
compromises everyone seems to like something and not like something about it),
it removes one excuse for failing to deal with Pennsylvania's budget
difficulties by raising new, recurring revenues. It is now completely and utterly clear that,
as we have been saying for years, the failure to reform pensions is not the
source of our persistent budget deficits.
We have reformed pensions and there is no positive impact on the state's
bottom line (nor will there be one for around for fifteen years). There is little expectation in the Capitol of
bringing long-term balance to the state's tattered finances before lawmakers
depart for their traditional summer break.
A second excuse for not raising new, recurring revenues, the claim that
our budget deficits are the result of too much spending, has also gone by the
wayside.
Please
consider taking action on this alert to urge your legislators to keep the $100
million increase for Basic Education Funding that the Governor proposed and the
House agreed with.
ALERT:
$100 million in funding for PA's schools is in jeopardy
Education Voters PA Legislative Alert June 19, 2017
State lawmakers are working to pass a budget for next year
and we are hearing that many do not support Governor Wolf's proposed $100
million increase in funding for public school students. Unless the state invests more in Basic Education Funding, our
public schools will continue to be forced to make cuts that hurt students and
enact local tax increases that hurt communities. To keep our schools from falling too far behind, state lawmakers
must reject any budget that does not contain at least a $100 million increase
in Basic Education Funding and they must make no other cuts to public schools. Please take action. Lawmakers need to hear
from their constituents so they make students a priority.
SB76:
Bucks, Montgomery school officials challenge plan to have districts live on
sales, incomes taxes
Intelligencer By
Gary Weckselblatt, staff writer June 21, 2017
Area school officials are attacking legislation that would change
the way districts are funded, significantly limiting most property taxes in
favor of increased sales and income taxes, and shift control of revenue from
local school boards to Harrisburg. Senate
Bill 76, the Property Tax Independence Act, introduced this week, would
increase the state's income tax from 3.07 percent to 4.95 percent and raise the
sales tax from 6 percent to 7 percent. Additionally, to make up the nearly $14
billion needed to fund the commonwealth's 500 school districts, the sales tax
would expand to cover more goods and services that are currently exempt. "This would be crippling, There's no
question about it," said Stephen Skrocki, North Penn School District's
business manager. "Our biggest concern is that real estate taxes are not
impacted by the economy, so we have a stable source of revenue for the school
district. If you move to revenue streams that are highly sensitive to the
economy, how can you live up to your promise to replenish those revenues? "What happens in an economic downturn?
Are they going to make us whole? Will there be any increase?" Should the measure become law, homeowners in
North Penn, the state's seventh-largest school district with nearly 13,000
students and a $252.2 million budget, could be negatively impacted as SB 76
would eliminate property taxes paid by businesses. The district would lose out
on revenue from commercial enterprises like Merck and Montgomery Mall. Merck
alone pays $12 million in property taxes to North Penn.
‘Swami’
Nester Predicted Newest Budget Turmoil
Sanatoga Post by Joe
Zlomek | June 21, 2017
LOWER POTTSGROVE PA – Only nine days ago, Pottsgrove School
District Business Administrator David Nester warned this might happen. As the district Board of School
Directors wrestled
during its June 13 (2017) meeting with ways to further whittle down what it perceives as an
already small potential property tax increase for the 2017-2018 academic year
budget, Nester urged caution. The budget includes up to $200,000 the state
hinted it would provide Pottsgrove in additional funding, he said, but the
district hadn’t definitively learned the promised money was on its way. “That represents a $200,000 question mark
right now,” Nester told directors at the time.
Developments this week in Harrisburg indicate Nester either owns a
fortune-telling swami’s crystal ball, is a good guesser, or understands all too
well how state politicians operate. Facing a $2 billion to $3 billion budget
gap, with a state budget due June 30, sources surprised capital education
watchers and lobbyists by leaking that earlier proposed increases in school
funding may be in jeopardy. “We’re
hearing that Gov. (Tom) Wolf’s proposed $100 million increase in basic
education funding is now on the table,” she said, and “could be cut or even
completely eliminated from the budget,” said Susan Spicka, executive director
of Education
Voters of Pennsylvania, an advocacy group. As lawmakers try to close that gap without
raising new revenue, she suggested everything is up for grabs.
Schools
sinking financially under lawmakers' watch
Letter by Gloria C. Endres Philadelphia by Daily News Readers views@phillynews.com
Updated: JUNE 22, 2017 — 3:01 AM EDT
KUDOS TO John Baer for his fact-filled report on the corrupt
practices of our state legislators ("Lawmakers' fiscal policy: Digging
deeper holes"). While our state
sinks deeper into debt, our schools remain underfunded and our budget is
perpetually tied to local "sin taxes," we continue to be the only
state in the nation that refuses to impose a severance tax on natural gas
extraction. According to Baer's sources, such a tax is projected to generate
over $300 million per year in revenue, more than enough to offset, for example,
the deficit projected by the School District of Philadelphia for the next five
years. But as Baer illustrates, key Harrisburg
legislators in both parties are in the pocket of the gas extraction industry to
the tune of $10 million - a cheap price to avoid a tax plan that might actually
help our state and our students.
How
a case in Pennsylvania predicted the Wisconsin gerrymandering challenge
Penn Live BY JOHN L. MICEK jmicek@pennlive.com Updated on June 21, 2017 at 1:51
PM Posted on June 21, 2017 at 7:27 AM
Good Wednesday Morning, Fellow Seekers.Running west through the Philadelphia suburbs, it takes in in a giant chunk of Delaware County, even as it stretches over its shoulder north and east to Montgomery County, before leaning to its south to hug the Delaware state line. This Rorschach blot of a district is so tortured and arthritic that it even has a nickname, "Goofy Kicking Donald" for its resemblance to the profiles of the beloved Disney characters. The district was drawn that way in 2010 to ensure that Republicans took back the seat formerly held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak. The gambit worked. A former United States Attorney named Pat Meehan has held the seat ever since. So veteran observers' ears here perked up this week at the news that the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a potentially precedent-setting case out of Wisconsin challenging partisan gerrymandering.
Op-ed:
Permitting concealed guns in Pa. schools would make kids less safe
WHYY Newsworks COMMENTARY BY DEBORAH GORDON KLEHR JUNE 21, 2017 SPEAK
EASY
Everyone wants our schools to be safe places for students and
educators. But legislation recently
passed out of the state Senate Education Committee that would permit school
personnel to carry concealed firearms in Pennsylvania's public schools is a
dangerous step in the wrong direction. Arming
school personnel would make students less safe and would threaten to turn our
schools into free-fire zones. Senate
Bill 383, sponsored by a group of Republican senators ignores the General
Assembly's own recommendations on improving school safety. A 2014 report released by the House Select
Committee on School Safety, which was formed to study ways of improving school
safety in the wake of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in
Connecticut, did not recommend arming school personnel as a means of addressing
perceived threats. Neither did a report released last year by the Joint State
Government Advisory Committee, which examined best practices to improve school
climate. There isn't one credible
national, state, or local organization that supports the idea of giving school
personnel permission to carry concealed guns on school property. Indeed,
National School Safety and Security Services, a consulting firm, advises
against arming teaches and school staff.
TOP 10 REASONS TO OPPOSE A $55M INCREASE
IN EITC/OSTC FUNDING FOR PRIVATE/RELIGIOUS SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS
Education Voters PA 2017
The Educational Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) and Opportunity
Scholarship Tax Credit (OSTC) programs already divert $125 million in business
tax payments out of the state budget and into scholarship organizations that
provide vouchers to students to attend private/religious schools. We oppose the
proposal to include a $55 million increase in EITC/OSTC funding for
private/religious schools in the 2017-2018 budget.
Community
schools: A key to improved behavioral health access?
The notebook by Paul Jablow June 21, 2017 — 10:39am
Antonio Romero’s introduction to the Kensington neighborhood came
when he was barely taller than the farebox on a SEPTA bus. “My field work started when I was 7,” he
said. His father drove the Route 3
bus through the area, and along the way, he would have his son interview
people on the street. “He taught me that
everyone had a story,” said Romero, who grew up in Bucks County but has
returned to the neighborhood to live and to serve as community schools program
coordinator at Kensington Health Sciences Academy. Now, when he interviews neighborhood
residents, he is looking not only to learn about them but also to change
their lives. Kensington is one of nine schools in Mayor Kenney’s community
schools initiative, which seeks to “improve access to programs, services, and
supports.” The initiative, supported
over the next four years by $40 million from the city’s new sweetened-beverage
tax, is projected to grow to 25 schools.
Detailed plans for each of the schools were released in March
after a months-long process in which the School District and the Mayor’s
Office of Education sought community input on what residents wanted for their
schools.
New
Pennsylvania law eliminates Keystone Exam requirement for career and technical
education students
Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer June 22, 2017
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf signed into law Wednesday a
bill creating an alternate pathway to high school graduation for
students in career and technology education — one without Keystone Exams. The new law eliminates the statutory
requirement for Keystone Exams and replaces it with new ways for vocational
students to prove they’re ready for the next step, whether it be the workforce,
college or a trade school. “Whether they
are working and learning in the classroom, in the lab, in the shop, in the
field or in the garage, young people are always striving and succeeding across
a wide variety of fields,” Wolf, a Democrat, said in a statement. “With this
measure, Pennsylvania will recognize diversity and will no longer hold all
students to the standard of a Keystone Examination, which too often doesn’t
reflect the reality of a large sector (of) students’ educational experience.” The bill, sponsored by Republican state Reps.
Mike Turzai and Mike Tobash, garnered bipartisan support through its five-month
journey from committee to the governor’s desk.
New
law: Career or technical students could earn high school diploma without
Keystone exams
by Karen
Langley, HARRISBURG BUREAU
Updated: JUNE 21, 2017 — 7:04 PM EDT
HARRISBURG — As state law stands, Pennsylvania is scheduled to
begin requiring students in two years to pass standardized Keystone
examinations in order to graduate high school. But with the signing of a new law Wednesday, students in career
and technical education programs will be allowed to demonstrate their readiness
for a diploma in other ways. “There are so many career pathways that exist within the economy
of Pennsylvania,” said Rep. Mike Tobash, (R-Schuylkill), one of the bill’s
sponsors. “There should be more educational pathways, and this is just
acknowledging that.” If students
enrolled in career and technical education do not do well enough on the
Keystone examinations in algebra 1, literature and biology, they will be permitted
to graduate anyway if they meet school district requirements in those subjects. That’s so long as the student also attains an
industry-based competency certification or shows they are likely to succeed on
an industry-based competency test or are ready for “continued meaningful
engagement” in their program of study.
Governor
Wolf Signs HB 202 Into Law
Governor Wolf’s Website June 21,
2017
Harrisburg, PA – Governor Tom Wolf today
signed House Bill 202, known as Act 6, into law. The bill, sponsored by House
Speaker Mike Turzai, amends the Public School Code to allow students in career
and technology education (CTE) to demonstrate proficiency and readiness for
high school graduation in an alternative pathway, and removes the statutory
requirement for the Keystone Exam on that student population. “Whether they are working and learning in the
classroom, in the lab, in the shop, in the field, or in the garage, our young
people are always striving and succeeding across a wide variety of fields,”
Governor Wolf said. “With this measure, Pennsylvania will recognize that
diversity and will no longer hold all students to the standard of a Keystone
Examination, which too often doesn’t reflect the reality of a large sector
students’ educational experience.” “We
continue to recognize the importance of providing multiple avenues for students
to demonstrate educational achievement, especially for students enrolled in
career and technical education,” said Speaker Turzai. “This law will ensure our
career and technical education system is flexible enough to adapt to the needs
of emerging industries, is accountable to ensure every child has a chance to
succeed, and is providing robust support for our educators. The bill passed
the House and Senate with broad bi-partisan support, and I am very appreciative
that the Governor has signed this important legislation into law.”
Advocates,
opponents of suspension reform in Pittsburgh Public Schools fail to agree on
proposal
MOLLY BORN Pittsburgh Post-Gazette mborn@post-gazette.com 9:15 PM JUN 21, 2017
Parent advocates have called for an immediate end to out-of-school
suspensions for the youngest learners in the Pittsburgh Public Schools. The
school system and teacher’s union want another year to make sure teachers have
the classroom support they need to make it a reality. A last-minute proposal Wednesday tried but failed to split the
difference. District 3 board member Tom
Sumpter Wednesday evening suggested the district convene a “working group” that
would study the topic and recommend supports teachers would need if the
district banned suspensions for kindergarteners, first-graders and
second-graders accused of nonviolent offenses.
But it also proposed a moratorium beginning Jan. 1 — with a K-5 ban to
start in the 2018-19 school year. Those dates drew criticism from several board
members, who disapproved of a firm deadline, in part because the committee
isn’t set to reveal its recommendations until November.
Innovative Arts' budget vote, unadvertised
meetings raise Sunshine Act questions
Sarah
M. Wojcik Contact Reporter Of The Morning Call June 21, 2017
The Innovative Arts Academy board of trustees adopted a 2017-18
budget during an unadvertised meeting in June where trustees refused to allow
questions on the spending plan from the public — actions that a legal expert
says run counter to the state Sunshine Act.
The board's actions at a June 7 meeting come as The Morning Call
discovered the charter school in Catasauqua has not advertised a regular or
special meeting — as required by law — since August. Board minutes reviewed by The Morning Call
list meetings as being advertised in The Express-Times. But according to copies
of the most recent paid advertisements made with the Easton newspaper, the
school last advertised Aug. 25. That legal ad was published to notify the
public of an Aug. 30 regular meeting, according to records. Melissa Melewsky, media law expert with the
Pennsylvania Newsmedia Association, said failing to advertise meetings and
preventing the public from commenting are violations of the state's
transparency laws. "Charter schools
do not get a pass from public notice, public participation and public meeting
requirements," she said.
York Dispatch by Junior
Gonzalez , 505-5439/@JuniorG_YD7:06 a.m. ET June 22, 2017
The York City school board voted unanimously Wednesday night to
initiate proceedings to revoke the charter for the Helen Thackston Charter
School. After solicitor Jeffrey Gettle
mentioned that two reasons listed from the resolution brought earlier this
month were removed (bringing down the listed reasons to 22), the board moved to
vote. Board President Margie Orr read
out the consent item verbatim as listed on the agenda and asked board secretary
Mindy Wantz to collect an individual roll call vote. The vote was 8-0. Board
member Diane Brown was absent for the vote.
“OK folks, the revocation process goes forward,” Orr said. Helen Thackston board President Danyielle
Newman, Helen Thackston Interim Principal Melissa Achuff and solicitor Brian
Leinhauser were present for the meeting but left immediately after the
vote. Leinhauser declined comment.
Aspira
Charter lays off most of security staff at Olney High
Inquirer by Martha
Woodall, Staff Writer @marwooda | martha.woodall@phillynews.com
Updated: JUNE 21, 2017 — 10:26 PM
EDT
The charter-school operator Aspira Inc. of Pennsylvania abruptly
laid off 18 of its 23 security employees at Olney Charter High School on
Tuesday in the midst of a union-organizing drive. Members of what Aspira calls the school’s “safety team” said they
were summoned to the human resources office at the nonprofit’s headquarters in
Hunting Park and told they were being terminated because of “budget problems.” “They never discussed anything before about a
budget anything,” said Louis Alvarez, who had been a member of Aspira’s safety
team at Olney for two years. “This came out of nowhere.” Staffers were told that they would receive
their last paycheck Friday and that their health insurance would end June 30.
Alison Burdo Digital Producer Philadelphia Business Journal Jun 21, 2017, 8:44am EDT Updated Jun 21, 2017, 11:28am EDT
Lower Merion School District officials are ready to appeal the
affluent suburban school system's battle with a community resident over tax
increases to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court after reportedly losing its latest
efforts calling for a review and reargument of its April appeal loss. The Commonwealth Court judge's denial of LMSD's latest appeal is
the latest chapter in the legal fight mounted by Arthur
Wolk, a Lower Merion resident and attorney, who says the district misled its taxpayers and continued to raise
taxes despite a funding surplus. Last
week, Wolk submitted his own motion in the case, calling for a judge to declare the district's budget for the
upcoming school district illegal. LMSD's 2017-2018 budget was approved earlier this week, according to Main Line Media News, which reported the district
won't back down from the litigation.
“District
officials say state-mandated pension contributions are to blame for spiraling
costs. If these contributions were removed, the 2017-18 budget would be
$244,645 smaller than the 2009-10 budget.”
Greensburg Salem increases
property tax 1 mill for 2017-18
Trib Live JACOB
TIERNEY | Thursday, June 22, 2017, 12:15 a.m.
At first a divided Greensburg Salem School Board rejected the
district's 16th tax increase in 17 years Wednesday night, but eventually
reversed its decision after failing to agree on another plan. Property taxes will go up one mill as originally proposed. That will cost the median taxpayer an
additional $16.49 a year and bring the total millage to 88.22.
“I
just want to give the taxpayers a one-year respite,” board member Gary
Topolosky said. The board is projecting
to use $491,242 from a reserve fund, leaving $4.43 million.”
Brentwood passes school
budget with no tax hike
Trib Live JIM
SPEZIALETTI | Wednesday, June 21, 2017, 3:30 p.m.
Brentwood School Board members this week approved the a $23.19
million final budget for the 2017-18 school year without a property tax
increase. After three years of tax
increases and pending capital improvement projects, most board members decided
to give homeowners a break from the rising tax rate that holds at 29.5322
mills. The budget was approved Monday
night by a 7-1 vote, with board member David Schaap voting against. Amy Hayden
not at the meeting.
Trib Live TOM
YERACE | Wednesday, June 21, 2017, 6:30 p.m.
School taxes won't be going up in the Highlands School District
next school year.
A tax increase was an option for the school board that remained in
play through the spring as district officials worked at cutting into a budget
deficit projected at $1 million in February.
Taxes could have been increased by 3.6 percent, or 0.85-mills
under state law, according to Business Manager Jon Rupert. That increase would
have raised an additional $500,000 in revenue.
An influx of $274,000 from the state for Social Security and pension
reimbursements along with ongoing budget cuts enabled district officials to
avoid the tax increase, he said.
Trib Live GEORGE
GUIDO | Wednesday, June 21, 2017, 6:21 p.m.
Real estate tax rates will be staying the same in the Deer Lakes
School District for the coming school year.
The school board Tuesday approved a $35.7 million budget that will keep
the tax rate at 21.953 mills. The school
district will dip into its fund balance to the tune of $300,000 to balance the
budget. A home with a median assessed
value of $127,000 will pay about $2,788 in property taxes for the 2017-18
school year.
http://triblive.com/local/valleynewsdispatch/12427850-74/deer-lakes-holds-the-line-on-property-taxes
Ambridge
Area School District to hold the line on taxes
Beaver County Times Katherine
Schaeffer June 21, 2017
AMBRIDGE -- The Ambridge Area School Board approved a budget
Wednesday evening that will hold the line on property taxes for the 2017-18
school year. The budget passed 8-1, with
board member Mary Jo Kehoe dissenting. Kehoe said she voted no simply because she
received the final version of the budget Wednesday afternoon and did not have
time to review it. The budget sets
expenses at $47,711.554 and will draw about $500,000 from the district’s
reserve fund to balance the books. It maintains the current millage rate of
79.2941. The owner of a property
assessed at $23,300, the district's median value, will receive an annual school
property tax bill of $1,846.78.
Politico By CAITLIN EMMA 06/21/2017 10:00 AM EDT With help from Helena Bottemiller Evich
Superintendents in school districts nationwide are writing their
senators to warn that a vote to repeal Obamacare could jeopardize health
coverage for the nation’s most vulnerable children. The letter-writing comes at
the urging of Democratic Sens. Patty
Murray and Bob
Casey who have stressed that legislation to repeal and replace
Obamacare could be moving fast. Republicans have been working behind closed
doors to bring a bill to the Senate floor and leadership is preparing for a
vote as early as next week, POLITICO reports. Letters have already been
penned by superintendents in Washington, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Minnesota,
Virginia, Wisconsin, Maine and Massachusetts.
— The superintendents’ concerns center on changes to Medicaid in
a bill passed by the House last month. The House bill would convert the
federal-state program for the poor and disabled from an entitlement program, in
which the government pays all the health-related costs for those who qualify,
to a grant program that would cap federal spending growth. The Congressional
Budget Office estimated in March that the legislation would cut Medicaid
spending by $880 billion over a decade. Dozens of education advocacy groups said last month that the change would force
schools to compete for funds with hospitals, physicians and clinics that serve
Medicaid-eligible children. That, in turn, would affect schools’ ability to
fund vision and hearing screenings, pay for supplies like wheelchairs, and
employ nurses, psychologists and occupational therapists, they said.
Medicaid Cuts
AASA Website
Superintendents and other school district leaders are
“overwhelmingly concerned” and “deeply worried” about students in special
education programs and those living in poverty if Republican proposals to
refinance Medicaid are enacted according to a new AASA survey. In Cutting
Medicaid: A Prescription to Hurt the Neediest Kids, close to 1,000 school leaders
detailed the educational and economic consequences of a proposed 30 percent cut
in Medicaid reimbursements. Republicans have expressed a desire to reduce
federal Medicaid spending by 25 percent by distributing funding through a block
grant or a per-capita cap, which would shift costs to states. Access the full report of Cutting
Medicaid here. an executive summary that
details the survey findings in brief here, and an infographic with the
eight facts you need to know about children on Medicaid and the services they
receive in schools here. Read the Save
Medicaid in Schools letter on AHCA.
Even
before GOP health care bill is introduced, battle lines clear in PA, NJ
Inquirer by Jonathan
Tamari, Washington Bureau @JonathanTamari | jtamari@phillynews.com
Updated: JUNE 21, 2017 — 7:38 PM EDT
WASHINGTON — The simmering Senate debate over health care is about
to go from shadowboxing to the real thing.
But even before Republicans roll out the details
of their plan Thursday, Philadelphia-area senators made clear where they
stand on the GOP’s long-promised bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care
Act, often called Obamacare.
Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey, the region’s lone Republican,
defended the GOP plan and its closed-door work crafting the bill. He said he
expected the measure to include a version of his plan to scale back spending on
Medicaid, the health program that provides coverage to millions of poor and
disabled people. The plan is part of a
broader push to reshape a law that he blamed for raising costs and reducing
consumer choices. “What we’ve said for
seven years now is that we want to repeal Obamacare, move health care in a different
direction,” Toomey said. “I think I’m going to be able to conclude that this is
a big step in that direction.” Every
Democrat from the region has vowed to oppose the measure, attacking it as a tax
giveaway to the wealthy that would cut critical consumer protections. “We have one choice: Stop the bill,”
Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania said in a call with reporters this
week. “It’s as simple as that. This isn’t a time for pretending that there’s
common ground on this bill.”
AP
sources: Senate GOP health bill would reshape Obama law
Delco Times By Alan Fram and Ricardo
Alonso-Zaldivar, The Associated Press POSTED: 06/22/17,
5:32 AM EDT | UPDATED: 1 MIN AGO
WASHINGTON >> Senate Republicans would cut Medicaid, end
penalties for people not buying insurance and erase a raft of tax increases as
part of their long-awaited plan to scuttle President Barack Obama’s health care
law, congressional aides and lobbyists say.
After weeks of closed-door meetings that angered Democrats and some Republicans,
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell planned to release the
proposal Thursday. The package represents McConnell’s attempt to quell
criticism by party moderates and conservatives and win the support he needs in
a vote he hopes to stage next week. In a
departure from the version the House approved last month, which
President Donald Trump privately called “mean,” the Senate plan would
drop the House’s waivers allowing states to let insurers boost premiums on some
people with pre-existing conditions. It would also largely retain the subsidies
Obama provided to help millions buy insurance, which are pegged mostly to
people’s incomes and the premiums they pay.
“But
on the eve of the bill’s release, Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.) faced the prospect of an open revolt from key
conservative and moderate GOP senators, whose concerns he has struggled to
balance in recent weeks. Republicans familiar with the effort said Senate
leaders have more work to do to secure the 50 votes needed to pass the measure,
with Vice President Pence set to cast the tiebreaking vote, from the pool of 52
GOP senators. No Democrats are expected to support the bill.”
Senate
Republicans set to release health-care bill, but divisions remain
Washington Post By Paige
Winfield Cunningham, Juliet
Eilperin and Sean
Sullivan June 21 at 8:36 PM
Senate Republicans on Thursday plan to release a health-care bill
that would curtail federal Medicaid funding, repeal taxes on the wealthy and
eliminate funding for Planned Parenthood as part of an effort to fulfill a
years-long promise to undo Barack Obama’s signature health-care law. The bill is an attempt to strike a compromise between existing law
and a bill passed by the House in May as Republicans struggle to advance their
vision for the country’s health-care system even though they now control both
chambers of Congress and the White House.
The Senate proposal largely mirrors the House measure with significant
differences, according to a discussion draft circulating Wednesday among aides
and lobbyists. While the House legislation would peg federal insurance
subsidies to age, the Senate bill would link them to income, as the Affordable
Care Act does. The Senate proposal would cut off expanded Medicaid funding for
states more gradually than the House bill but would enact deeper long-term cuts
to the health-care program for low-income Americans. It also would eliminate
House language aimed at prohibiting federally subsidized health plans from
covering abortions, a provision that may run afoul of complex Senate budget
rules.
What's in the Senate's secret Obamacare
repeal bill
The plan tracks the House-passed overhaul, also taking aim
at Medicaid.Politico By JENNIFER HABERKORN 06/21/2017 01:56 PM EDT Updated 06/21/2017 07:50 PM EDT
The Senate is on the verge of unveiling a sweeping Obamacare
repeal bill that would end Medicaid as an open-ended entitlement, roll back health
insurance subsidies and strike multiple taxes from the Affordable Care Act. The bill is expected to repeal the biggest
parts of the Affordable Care Act, including the individual mandate and the
employer mandate. It is also expected to defund Planned Parenthood for one year
by kicking the women's health organization out of the Medicaid program. That
provision could be dropped if Majority Leader Mitch McConnell needs
votes from moderate Republicans who oppose it.
Senate Republicans plan to release the draft at
approximately 11 a.m. Thursday and hold a vote at the end of next week. Key
parts could change as Republicans negotiate final details and try to come up
with 50 votes they need to pass the bill. There are also unresolved questions
about how much of the bill can be squeezed through the Senate’s strict budget
rules governing the fast-track procedure called reconciliation that the GOP is
using to avoid a filibuster.
“A
leading fiscal conservative, Toomey spearheads the effort to drive down overall
Medicaid spending. He wants to cut the program even deeper than the House did —
its bill cut the program by $834 billion over a decade.”
How McConnell gets to 50 votes to repeal ObamacarePolitico By JENNIFER HABERKORN 06/20/17 8:00 PM EDT
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell needs to nail
down 50 GOP votes to repeal Obamacare. He has no easy options. He can lean toward conservatives
like Rand Paul of Kentucky and Mike Lee of Utah, who want
to dismantle as much of Obamacare as they possibly can. But if he does that, he
risks losing a group of Senate moderates, including Susan Collins of
Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Rob Portman of Ohio
and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, who are pushing for a slower
phase-out of the Medicaid expansion that is covering low-income people in some
of their states. The stakes are high:
The GOP’s political identity is tied to the repeal pledge Republicans have made
since the Affordable Care Act was signed more than seven years ago.
Is
DeVos Sending Mixed Messages on Advanced Courses and Accountability?
Education Week Pollitics K12 Blog By Alyson
Klein on June 21, 2017 7:35 AM
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos seems to be sending some
confusing signals when it comes to whether states will be allowed to use
Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate tests, the SAT,
dual-enrollment courses, or career certifications to figure out if students are
ready for college and the workforce, some experts say. Rating schools based on whether they get kids
ready for college and the workforce was all the rage in state's
plans to implement the Every Student Succeeds Act. And at least eight
states—that's about half of the 17 that have turned in plans so far—want to use
AP, IB the SAT, dual enrollment courses, or career certifications for
accountability. The problem? It's
unclear if DeVos is cool with that, even though she has said she will make
local control a big focus of ESSA implementation. What's more, some experts
worry that her team may be telling different states different things when it
comes to how they measure college and career readiness. Here's how this became an issue:
Delaware, like almost every state, wants to rate schools based on whether they
get kids ready for college and career. To measure that, the districts can use
AP test scores, IB test scores, and whether students hit certain targets on the
SAT. Districts can also consider whether students have earned a B or
better in a college-level course.
Q&A: NSBA’s Tom Gentzel on why it’s
more important than ever to stand up for public schools
TrustEd POSTED BY: TODD KOMINIAK MAY 22, 2017
It’s a challenging time for America’s public schools. School
choice advocates continue to cast public schools as “failing” and
“old-fashioned.” Amid the hubbub, a growing chorus of advocates, educators,
parents, and students is pushing back on that narrative. Their collective goal: To give voice to the
success, progress, and vital importance of America’s public schools. At the forefront of this movement is the
National School Boards Association’s Stand Up 4 Public Schools campaign, a combination of
videos, posters, and social media that highlights everyday successes of
students and teachers in America’s public schools. We recently sat down with NSBA Executive
Director and CEO Tom Gentzel to talk about the new campaign and what its
success says about the nation’s changing education landscape.
Apply Now for EPLC's 2017-2018 PA Education Policy Fellowship
Program!
Education Policy and Leadership Center
Applications are available now for the 2017-2018
Education Policy Fellowship Program (EPFP). The
Education Policy Fellowship Program is sponsored in Pennsylvania by The
Education Policy and Leadership Center (EPLC). Click here for the program calendar of sessions. With more than 500 graduates in its
first eighteen years, this Program is a premier professional development
opportunity for educators, state and local policymakers, advocates, and
community leaders. State Board of Accountancy (SBA) credits are available
to certified public accountants. Past participants include state policymakers,
district superintendents and principals, school business officers, school board
members, education deans/chairs, statewide association leaders, parent leaders,
education advocates, and other education and community leaders. Fellows are
typically sponsored by their employer or another organization. The Fellowship Program begins with a two-day
retreat on September 14-15, 2017 and continues to graduation
in June 2018.
The Timothy M. Allwein Advocacy
Award was established in 2011 by the Pennsylvania School Boards Association and
may be presented annually to the individual school director or entire school
board to recognize outstanding leadership in legislative advocacy efforts on
behalf of public education and students that are consistent with the positions
in PSBA’s Legislative Platform. In
addition to being a highly respected lobbyist, Timothy Allwein served to help
our members be effective advocates in their own right. Many have said that Tim
inspired them to become active in our Legislative Action Program and to develop
personal working relationships with their legislators. The 2017 Allwein Award nomination process
will begin on Monday, May 15, 2017. The application due
date is July 16, 2017 in the honor of Tim’s birth date of July 16.
Pennsylvania Education Leadership Summit July 23-25, 2017 Blair
County Convention Center - Altoona
A three-day event providing an excellent opportunity for
school district administrative teams and instructional leaders to learn, share
and plan together
co-sponsored by PASA, the Pennsylvania Principals
Association, PASCD and the PA Association for Middle Level Education
**REGISTRATION IS OPEN**Early Bird Registration Ends
after April 30!
Keynote speakers, high quality breakout sessions, table
talks on hot topics, and district team planning and job-alike sessions will
provide practical ideas that can be immediately reviewed and discussed at the
summit and utilized at the district level.
Keynote Speakers:
Thomas Murray, Director of Innovation for Future Ready Schools, a project of the Alliance for Excellent Education
Kristen Swanson, Director of Learning at Slack and one of the founding members of the Edcamp movement
Thomas Murray, Director of Innovation for Future Ready Schools, a project of the Alliance for Excellent Education
Kristen Swanson, Director of Learning at Slack and one of the founding members of the Edcamp movement
Breakout session strands:
*Strategic/Cultural Leadership
*Systems Leadership
*Leadership for Learning
*Professional and Community Leadership
*Strategic/Cultural Leadership
*Systems Leadership
*Leadership for Learning
*Professional and Community Leadership
CLICK HERE to access the Summit website for
program, hotel and registration information.
Save the Date 2017 PA Principals Association State Conference
October 14. 15, 16, 2017 Doubletree Hotel Cranberry Township, PA
Save the Date: PASA-PSBA
School Leadership Conference October 18-20, Hershey PA
Registration now open for
the 67th Annual PASCD Conference Nov. 12-13 Harrisburg: Sparking Innovation: Personalized
Learning, STEM, 4C's
This year's conference will begin on Sunday, November 12th
and end on Monday, November 13th. There will also be a free pre-conference on
Saturday, November 11th. You can
register for this year's conference online with a credit card payment or have
an invoice sent to you. Click here to register for the conference.
http://myemail.constantcontact.com/PASCD-Conference-Registration-is-Now-Open.html?soid=1101415141682&aid=5F-ceLtbZDs
http://myemail.constantcontact.com/PASCD-Conference-Registration-is-Now-Open.html?soid=1101415141682&aid=5F-ceLtbZDs
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