Thursday, July 16, 2020

PA Ed Policy Roundup for July 16: Follow the Students First PAC Money in 2020


Started in November 2010, daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now reach more than 4050 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors, administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, superintendents, school solicitors, principals, charter school leaders, PTO/PTA officers, parent advocates, teacher leaders, business leaders, faith-based organizations, labor organizations, education professors, members of the press and a broad array of P-16 regulatory agencies, professional associations and education advocacy organizations via emails, website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn.

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PA Ed Policy Roundup for July 16, 2020
Follow the Students First PAC Money in 2020


Central York SD
$1,022,718.37
Eastern York SD
$1,204,082.51
Red Lion Area SD
$1,320,999.79
South Eastern SD
$1,096,676.37
York Suburban SD
$1,104,923.32

$5,749,400.36
Data Source: PDE via PSBA

Why are PA taxpayers paying twice what it costs to provide a cyber education?
Why are cyber charter tuition rates the same as brick and mortar tuition?


Follow the Students First PAC Money in 2020
State Rep. Chris Dush is slated to run for the senate seat of Senator Scarnati, President Pro Tempore of the Senate, who is retiring this year. The PA Campaign Finance website shows over $500K in campaign contributions to Rep. Dush in 2020, with the bulk of it coming from PACs associated with former Commonwealth Foundation CEO Matt Brouillette.
$435,111 from the Commonwealth Leaders Fund
$60,000 from the Commonwealth Children’s Fund
$56,368 from the Citizens Alliance of PA
For a total of $551,479 in 2020 thus far.

Where did the $$ come from?
The Students First PAC  (Joel Greenberg, Jeff Yass and Arthur Dantchik) gave $405,000 to Citizens Alliance of PA & $1,000,000 to Commonwealth Children’s Fund in 2020
Over the past several years, the Students First PAC has spent millions on candidates who support privatizing public schools.  Here’s a recent related piece…..
THE DARK MONEY BEHIND PENNSYLVANIA’S REOPEN RALLIES
Pennsylvania Spotlight JUN 8, 2020 
Dark money groups connected to Betsy DeVos and former Commonwealth Foundation CEO Matt Brouillette are funding legislators who have thrown themselves at the forefront of the bigoted, far-right, astroturfed movements that sprang up during the coronavirus pandemic. Brouillette’s two political action committees – the Commonwealth Leaders Fund and the Commonwealth Children’s Choice Fund – have donated $313,535 to three proponents who have made bigoted remarks. No one should be surprised. Just two months ago, Brouillette went to great lengths mocking workers who couldn’t access PPEs by posting a selfie of himself wearing a women’s menstrual pad to his face. A month after video, he was caught using the Commonwealth Foundation offices as a safe space for Reopen Pennsylvania organizers and speakers. He accused Governor Tom Wolf of “juicing” the state’s coronavirus death toll to make the fringe protesters look bad. Brouillette launched the Commonwealth Leaders Fund in late 2017 and had no trouble attracting big money from right-wing donors. Students First, a Betsy DeVos linked political action committee, donated $2.75 million within a year. Then in 2019, Brouillette launched the Commonwealth Children’s Choice Fund, and received two separate checks from Students First in August and December totaling $5 million. Campaign finance reporting shows that Brouillette has frequently moved large sums of money from the Commonwealth Children’s Choice Fund into the Commonwealth Leaders Fund. Now it’s time to shine a spotlight where that DeVos funding is going. During this session, the Commonwealth Children’s Choice Fund and the Commonwealth Leaders Fund donated $25,000 to Senator Doug Mastriano, $30,000 to Representative Andrew Lewis, and $258,585 to Representative Cris Dush.

Fraud audit report: Easton Arts Academy Elementary Charter School missing more than $500K
WFMZ69 News by Emma Wright Jul 15, 2020 Updated 3 hrs ago
Missing money is the latest problem to plague the troubled Easton Area Arts Elementary Charter School. According to a 14-page fraud audit report given to 69 News by a source, an alleged fraudulent 1099 tax form from 2018 was issued to subcontractor PenTeleData, the schools internet and communications provider for more than $570,000 about 10% of the school's revenue for 2018. The report states the fraud examiner contacted the company and was told the school paid PenTeleData just under $20,000 in 2018 and not $570,000 as the tax form states and that the form is most likely fraudulent and that it is possible school funds were being embezzled. The report also states that there were questionable purchases made on multiple school debit cards in 2017, 2018, and 2019 but it can't be determined if the purchases were made for personal benefit. "I alerted the fraud auditor to the 1099 that looked suspicious. It seemed odd to me that there would be a 1099 for $570,000 to an internet service provider when we don't own our building. Why would we make such improvements,” said school board member Sharon Jermany.

Wolf willing to ‘pull the plug’ on school reopening if new COVID surge can’t be stopped
Lehigh Valley Live By David Wenner | dwenner@pennlive.com Updated Jul 16, 2020; Posted Jul 15, 2020
Gov. Tom Wolf said Wednesday he’s willing to “pull the plug” on school reopening if a new surge of COVID-19 infections continues to grow. Yet it might be irrelevant, he said, because fear of catching the disease would likely keep teachers and students away anyway. Wolf and others cited that potential as a major factor in the decision to impose the new restrictions on restaurants, bars and indoor gatherings announced Wednesday. With only about six weeks remaining before the start of school, it’s critical to bring the surge under control now, they stressed. “If we do not get community disease transmission rates down, we’re really threatening the most important re-openings that you have coming around Labor Day,” said Dr. David Rubin, a pediatrician, referring to schools. Rubin works at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and is involved with a tracking and projection model Wolf and state Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine drew on in deciding to impose the new restrictions. Rubin said his team wants schools to open this fall. But they believe it requires infections being brought under control to assure safety and to gave families and teachers confidence they will be safe.

COVID-19 in Pa.: If the priority is making sure schools reopen, why didn’t we plan for that first? | Thursday Morning Coffee
PA Capital Star Commentary By  John L. Micek July 16, 2020
Good Thursday Morning, Fellow Seekers.
How many more times are we going to get this wrong?
Let’s accept for a moment that the core reason that Gov. Tom Wolf and state Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine rolled out a new suite of COVID-19 mitigation measures Wednesday clamping down on large gatherings and indoor dining is to get the virus under control so that schools can reopen safely in the fall. Good deal. I want schools to reopen safely this fall so that my child and yours can go back to class — at least  part time — as we continue to try to get the worst public health crisis in a century under control. More power to the administration, I hope that happens.
But I cannot help but ask — again — why didn’t policymakers have a plan in place to reopen schools before and not after they reopened the economy? You can reopen as many businesses as you want, and send as many people back to the office as social distancing guidelines dictate, but none of that matters if the parents of school-aged children are worrying about where they’re going to find childcare for their first-grader or how they’re going to be both at work and at home to handle online lessons for their kids. As Deb Perleman wrote so eloquently in the New York Times on July 2, “In the COVID-19 economy, you can have a kid or a job. You can’t have both.”

“It is hard to say with certainty why the secretary of education would put public schools in this difficult position. But Ms. DeVos is, in effect, promoting a new form of school choice: If your child’s school can’t afford to open safely, you need to find one that can — probably a private or charter school — or keep your child at home.”
Why Push Public Schools to Open Without Helping Them Open Safely?
Maybe someday Betsy DeVos will explain her thinking.
New York Times Opinion By Jessica Calarco July 15, 2020, 5:00 a.m. ET
Dr. Calarco is a sociologist.
As the coronavirus continues to wreak havoc across the United States, some public K-12 schools may be able to reopen safely, but doing so will not be cheap. A recent report from the Council of Chief State School Officers estimated that public K-12 schools will need as much as $245 billion in additional funding to open with the recommended protocols in place from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Yet with local and state budgets strapped, many schools are likely to fall short unless they receive considerable federal support. The Department of Education, however, has not stepped up to fill that need. Funding for K-12 schools through the Cares Act is $13.5 billion — well below $245 billion. Instead, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is pressuring schools to open and threatening to cut off funds to public schools that don’t fully open in the fall. She has suggested that those federal funds could be diverted to families to help pay for private or religious education. She has already put in place “micro-grants” for families that want to home-school their children this fall. In other words, Ms. DeVos is not only failing to provide public schools the federal money they need to reopen safely; she is also potentially destabilizing the budgets of already struggling schools.

Philly District’s hybrid plan provokes questions, concerns among parents and teachers
Most students will attend school in person two days a week; families can opt for a "digital academy."
The notebook by Dale Mezzacappa and Bill Hangley Jr. July 15 — 5:43 pm, 2020
The School District of Philadelphia announced a complicated hybrid reopening plan Wednesday in which most students would attend school two days a week, relying on virtual learning the rest of the time.  Families will also have the option of going all-digital in a District-run “digital academy” and must make that decision by Aug. 4. Teachers can opt out of in-person teaching if they have a medical reason. They will be required to show evidence of being especially vulnerable to the coronavirus due to their own health or that of a family member.  Each school is charged with figuring out how best to implement the plan and still follow all the health and safety guidelines, one of which is to have no more than 12 to 15 students in each classroom at a time.  All individuals are expected to stay six feet apart, including the youngest children; hallways and rooms will be marked. A five-level cleaning plan will be virtually constant, and the District may have to expand its 900-person custodial staff to make sure it is carried out.  Each day, staff and families will need to fill out a health assessment asking whether anyone in their household has tested positive for COVID-19 and whether they have been exposed to someone with the virus. There will not be daily temperature checks or testing of asymptomatic staff members. All people entering the building, from kindergarten students on up, will be required to wear a mask or face covering that meets prescribed standards. Those who cannot wear a mask for health reasons will need to wear a face shield.

Philly schools plan for fall: Two days a week in-person, everyone wearing masks
WHYY By Avi Wolfman-Arent July 15, 2020
School District of Philadelphia students will return to school in-person this fall, but on a part-time basis, officials announced Wednesday. The plan calls for students to attend classes in their respective school buildings twice a week, while completing the rest of their work online. Some high-needs students will have the option to attend school four days a week, as will pre-K students. Families that don’t feel comfortable sending their children to in-person school can opt for all-virtual instruction, officials said. The district’s plan also requires increased daily cleanings, including the disinfection of “high-touch” surfaces every four hours. It also mentions the use of fans and outside “air dampers” to increase ventilation within buildings. Families will be asked to monitor students for signs of sickness, but the district will not conduct daily temperature checks. Staff will have to fill out a “pre-entry screening form” before entering the building each day that asks about symptoms and contact with COVID-19 carriers. Families will also be “required” to do daily health checks of students and will be asked to commit to keeping sick children home. There is no plan to provide regular coronavirus testing for asymptomatic staff or students, according to city health commissioner Dr. Thomas Farley, who said that idea simply was not practical.

Philly’s coronavirus back-to-school plan: No full reopening, most students in class 2 days, could cost $80M
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Updated: July 15, 2020- 11:05 AM
Philadelphia’s school and city leaders on Wednesday announced plans to reopen schools in September, but not fully, with most children attending in-person classes two days a week. Ending weeks of buildup, the district said it would open two days later than planned, with more staff, less crowded classrooms, and promises to scrub and sanitize buildings to minimize the spread of the coronavirus in the school system of 125,000. Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. said the extra steps would come at a cost — possibly $80 million or more — and cautioned that public health conditions could shift abruptly and force a return to 100% remote instruction. Philadelphia Health Commissioner Thomas Farley acknowledged that a return to in-person school carries risks. But, Farley said at a news conference, “for their long-term success, including their long-term health, children need to learn. As a society, we need to find a way to balance those risks.”

Philly’s school plan is out. Parents are panicked.
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham and Hadriana Lowenkron, Posted: July 15, 2020- 6:30 PM
Icylee Basketville worries about putting her daughter on a school bus. Jessika Roche isn’t sure how she’s going to educate her two children full time at home and work enough to make ends meet. And Gretchen Dahlkemper laments the fact that her best option is sending her children to live in another city. The Philadelphia School District on Wednesday released its school reopening plan, offering families the choice of either a two-day-a-week face-to-face option or the choice of going 100% virtual. It put parents in an immediate panic, worried about both their children’s health and their own ability to support their families, and laid bare the lack of a safety net for working families. The district said it would work with the city and outside providers to make child care available for days when students are not in school, but there’s no guarantee those solutions will work for everyone.

PPS continues to advance toward reopening
ANDREW GOLDSTEIN Pittsburgh Post-Gazette agoldstein@post-gazette.com JUL 15, 2020  
10:11 PM
The Pittsburgh Public Schools on Wednesday took small steps toward reopening a day after the district released its preliminary plan to get students back into the classroom. School board members gave approval to a number of requests district administrators had sought for starting the academic year amid a global pandemic. Discussion on the overall reopening plan was limited, however, even though the board will vote next week on the district’s proposed health and safety guidelines. School board President Sylvia Wilson said the board members would have a more in-depth dialogue at their July 22 meeting, when they are expected to vote on the plan.

South Fayette School District reopening plan presented, approval set for next week
Trib Live by MICHAEL DIVITTORIO   | Wednesday, July 15, 2020 10:33 p.m.
South Fayette School District’s health and safety plan for the upcoming school year requires students and staff to wear face coverings and practice social distancing as much as possible when returning to school. It also provides an option for parents to continue their student’s distance learning or enroll in a cyber academy if they’re not comfortable sending their son or daughter back into the buildings. All options require a semester commitment before switching from online or in-person education. Enrollment forms will be available for families so they can chose which educational option they want for their children. Forms are due back by July 31.
The plan was presented during a school board meeting Tuesday evening. It’s expected to be approved July 21.

New Kensington-Arnold School District reopening plan presented
Trib Live MICHAEL DIVITTORIO   | Wednesday, July 15, 2020 8:42 p.m.
New Kensington-Arnold School District’s health and safety plan calls for students and staff to wear face coverings and practice social distancing as much as possible when returning to schools in late August. Wearing masks on buses and temperature checks upon arrival are also part of the plan that was discussed at a school board committee meeting Wednesday night. “It is the intention to bring back students full time with safety protocols in place,” Superintendent John Pallone said. “There’s nominal risk in what we’re considering to do.” District officials were still discussing the plan with parents as of press time. Children with health conditions that make it difficult to wear face coverings will not be mandated to do so, according to the superintendent. Those families will have to sign a waiver. A master list of those families will be stored in the administration office, and building-­specific lists will be given to principals. The plan is still in draft form. The board plans to approve it July 28.

EDITORIAL: School reopening plans might be moot
York Dispatch by The Dispatch Editorial Board July 16, 2020
Pay no mind, residents of the Spring Grove Area School District. This, too, seems destined to change. On Monday, the Spring Grove school board rightly approved a reopening plan that, by and large, requires staff and students to wear masks.  The move came a month after two members of the board lambasted the advice of state and federal health officials, and made spurious, conspiracy-laden claims about science itself. Theirs were claims boosted by throngs of backers shilling unsupported drivel because that's what qualifies as debate now. It was, in every sense, just another snapshot of a dysfunctional country in which the rejection of expertise has been elevated to a populist ideal. But those who see tyranny in a simple mask mandate — in a nation where "no shirt, no shoes, no service" is ubiquitous and women are fined for exposing a nipple — probably shouldn't worry too much about the reopening plans at Spring Grove or anywhere else for that matter. Fact is, in no small part thanks to the pervasiveness of conspiratorial thinking such as theirs, the coronavirus is out of control, and the likelihood of schools reopening normally in the fall declines every day.

In the Same Towns, Private Schools Are Reopening While Public Schools Are Not
Private schools have always had more flexibility, and usually more money, but never has that disparity made a bigger difference than now.
New York Times By Claire Cain Miller July 16, 2020, 5:00 a.m. ET
In Honolulu, nearly all public schools are planning to allow students to return for just part of the week. But at Punahou, a private school for grades kindergarten through 12, school will open full time for everyone. The school has an epidemiologist on staff and is installing thermal scanners in the hallways to take people’s temperatures as they walk by. It has a new commons area and design lab as well as an 80-acre campus that students can use to spread out. There were already two teachers for 25 children, so it will be easy to cut classes in half to meet public health requirements for small, consistent groups. The same thing is happening in communities across the country: Public schools plan to open not at all or just a few days a week, while many neighboring private schools are opening full time. Private schools may reverse course if there are outbreaks in their communities, and governors could still shut down all schools if they determine that local infection rates call for it. Some families and teachers won’t feel comfortable returning. But the ways in which private schools are reopening show it can be done with creative ideas — and the money to carry them out.

History is ‘white-washed,' police don’t belong in schools, say city and suburban teens in chat about race
By JACQUELINE PALOCHKO THE MORNING CALL | JUL 15, 2020 AT 8:58 AM
As the nation awakens to a reckoning of widespread racism, Lehigh Valley teenagers are speaking up about issues facing students of color in schools. Tuesday night, students from Parkland, Emmaus and Allentown’s Dieruff and Allen high schools joined a virtual town hall to discuss topics ranging from school resource officers to how American history is taught. They also spoke about the Black Lives Matter movement and the work they plan to continue. The town hall was hosted by Dolly Amaro, Allen High’s site coordinator through Communities in Schools, and Rodney Be, a manager with POWER Lehigh Valley, an interfaith organization addressing oppression and inequities in communities. Allentown Councilwoman Ce-Ce Gerlach moderated it. “We’re here because we need to have a conversation, but more so, we need to listen,” Gerlach said. “Those of us who are over the age of 21 just need to listen to our youth and hear what they’ve experienced.”Here are some topics the students discussed:

Letter: Pennsylvania must change education funding method
Reading Eagle Letter by Roger Mauchline Brecknock Township Jul 14, 2020
It’s time to stop promoting bad education for children from poor neighborhoods by funding schools through property taxes. The worst schools exist in poor neighborhoods. There just isn’t enough money from the run-down properties in which many poor families live to adequately fund their schools. The result is young people entering adulthood unprepared and discouraged. It is discrimination between those who have property and those who do not. Sure, some kids still achieve and even excel in the face of this discrimination, adding to the greatness of America. Too many don’t. They add unemployment, poverty, discouragement and sometimes crime. Think about the costs associated with these in terms of unemployment benefits, social services, law enforcement, and wasted talent. It is not equal opportunity, it is not just, it is not American, and it is costly. We decided long ago that every child should have a basic education. It is their right. It is the law. I am sure that we meant a good education. It won’t take more money to fund our schools from other kinds of taxes. We will actually save a lot of money that’s being spent for a host of remedial government services. We need our Pennsylvania legislators to step up to the plate, figure out the best way to fund schools in a just way, and get it into law. This is the real leadership that we expect from them. It’s our kids — we can’t let them down.

PIAA moves forward with fall sports
The PIAA is "moving forward" with the fall sports season. The Commonwealth's governing body for high school sports issued a statement declaring its intention to resume athletic competition, beginning Aug. 10 with a week of heat acclimatization for football. All other fall sports — cross country, field hockey, golf, soccer, tennis (girls), volleyball (girls) and water polo — will begin Aug. 17. In its statement, the PIAA made clear that it will continue with fall sports unless instructed otherwise by the state. In other words, fall sports will not be played in the event Gov. Tom Wolf calls for all schools to close in the weeks before, or at any point during, the 2020-21 school year.
The announcement came during the PIAA’s Board of Directors meeting on Zoom on Wednesday afternoon

‘The discussion is not going away.’ Bellefonte’s board of directors talk next steps for mascot issue
Centre Daily Times BY MARLEY PARISH JULY 15, 2020 01:41 PM , UPDATED JULY 15, 2020 02:54 PM
After more than a month of silence, the Bellefonte board of directors voted 6-3 Tuesday to discuss controversy around the “Red Raider” mascot. Following ongoing community demands and what board member Rodney Musser called a “surprise” letter released by board president Jon Guizar, he requested that a discussion be added to Tuesday’s meeting agenda as an act of transparency. Assuming most community members were in attendance to comment on the mascot — a red Native American with a headdress — Musser said the board needed to acknowledge concerns that have unfolded online and within the Bellefonte area. “This is just a discussion about a mascot that other communities have already gotten rid of,” Musser said, citing recent examples. “These are discussions that are happening currently.” Nearly 4,000 people have signed an online petition in support of replacing the mascot with something not hostile or stereotypical toward Native Americans. A counter petition to keep the logo has been signed by almost 5,000. Divided on the issue, some board members and community members expressed concerns over the board’s priorities, like the fall reopening plan, proposed elementary school project and superintendent search. Others said the conversation has highlighted tensions between dialogue and civility.


Philly Jazz Legends: John Coltrane
Free Library of Philadelphia Blog By Ben R. Wed, July 15, 2020
This is the first in a series of posts highlighting major figures in jazz history who were from Philly (even if most ended up in New York City). A virtual book discussion of Wishing on the Moon: The Life and Times of Billie Holiday by Donald Clarke will take place on Thursday, August 20 at 8:00 p.m. Every one of the bolded album titles below can be streamed for free with your library card via Alexander Street’s Jazz Music Library database.

Born in rural North Carolina, John Coltrane moved to Philadelphia as a teenager in 1943, working at the Campbell’s Soup factory in Camden, among other jobs. After a stint in the army, he bought a house for his young family at 33rd and Oxford. There bloomed his devotion to the tenor saxophone and to expanding the range of sonic expression. He rode SEPTA to 17th and Chestnut to study harmony with legendary music theorist Dennis Sandole, who also taught jazz greats Jim Hall and Pat Martino (both guitarists), as well as current innovators like pianist Matthew Shipp and alto saxophonist Bobby Zankel — who still lives and works in Philly, and who has appeared in concert at Parkway Central Library. Not for nothing, but three of those musicians play instruments that can play multiple notes at once. Coltrane wanted to find a way to make his horn sing with a polyphony previously unknown on a single-note instrument. The house in Strawberry Mansion is where he began to achieve this goal, blending his studies with Sandole with the lessons he was learning nightly on the bandstand as he gigged with Philadelphians Jimmy Heath and Dizzy Gillespie, among many others. Heath later mused that at that time Coltrane practiced "25 hours a day."

“How to see the comet: To catch NEOWISE yourself, look up at the northwest skies about an hour and a half after sunset. Experts suggest going to the darkest area you can for best viewing. Find the Big Dipper and follow its ladle as it arcs in the direction of the horizon. NEOWISE will appear under the Big Dipper about 10 degrees above the horizon and be about as bright as that constellation’s stars. If you hold out your arm, 10 degrees is roughly the part of the sky covered by your fist. Over the next few days, NEOWISE will move higher in the sky and be easier to spot, reaching its apex on July 23, when it makes its closest approach to Earth.”
Comet NEOWISE: How to See It in Night Skies
Enjoy it while you can. The frozen ball of ice won’t return to the inner solar system for 6,800 years.
New York Times By Adam Mann July 15, 2020
Eager sky watchers are turning to the heavens as Comet NEOWISE, one of the brightest comets in a generation, starts climbing ever higher among the evening stars.  A majority of comets fly through the solar system invisible to humans, usually too small and dim to be seen with the naked eye. The last frozen ice ball that gave us a big show was Hale-Bopp, a comet that was visible for nearly 18 months around its closest approach to Earth in 1997. Officially designated C/2020 F3, Comet NEOWISE was discovered on March 27 and had until this week been visible only to committed comet viewers willing to wake up in the early pre-dawn hours. But on Monday, NEOWISE tipped into the post-sunset sky and has even been spotted by people living near city centers with all the light pollution. “It’s the first time in 23 years that this is possible,” said Federica Spoto, an astronomer at the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. “You can watch it from your backyard and you don’t need a telescope.”

Cybers charters are paid at the same tuition rates as brick & mortar charter schools, even though they have none of the expenses associated with operating school buildings. It has been estimated that cyber charters are paid approximately twice what it costs them to provide an online education. Those excess funds are then not available to serve all of the students who remain in the sending school districts.

Interested in becoming an Advocacy Ambassador? PSBA is seeking ambassadors to fill anticipated vacancies for Sections 1, 2 and 6.
PSBA Advocacy Ambassador program brings legislators to you
POSTED ON JULY 1, 2020 IN PSBA NEWS
PSBA’s Advocacy Ambassador program is a key resource helping public school leaders connect with their state legislators on important education issues. Our six ambassadors build strong relationships with the school leaders and legislators in their areas to support advocacy efforts at the local level. They also encourage legislators to visit school districts and create opportunities for you to have positive conversations and tell your stories about your schools and students. PSBA thanks those school districts that have worked with their advocacy ambassador and invites those who have not to reach out to their ambassador to talk about the ways they can support your advocacy efforts. Interested in becoming an Advocacy Ambassador? PSBA is seeking ambassadors to fill anticipated vacancies for Sections 1, 2 and 6. For more information contact jamie.zuvich@psba.org

PSBA Fall Virtual Advocacy Day: OCT 8, 2020 • 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Sign up now for PSBA’s Virtual Advocacy Day this fall!
All public school leaders are invited to join us for our fall Virtual Advocacy Day on Thursday, October 8, 2020, via Zoom. We need all of you to help strengthen our advocacy impact. The day will center around contacting legislators to discuss critical issues affecting public education. Registrants will receive the meeting invitation with a link to our fall Virtual Advocacy Day website that contains talking points, a link to locate contact information for your legislator and additional information to help you have a successful day.
Cost: As a membership benefit, there is no cost to register.
Registration: School directors can register online now by logging in to myPSBA. If you have questions about Virtual Advocacy Day, or need additional information, contact Jamie.Zuvich@psba.org.

Apply Now for EPLC's 2020-2021 PA Education Policy Fellowship Program!
Applications are available now for the 2020-2021 Education Policy Fellowship Program
The Education Policy Fellowship Program is sponsored in Pennsylvania by The Education Policy and Leadership Center (EPLC).  The 2020-2021 Program will be conducted in briefer, more frequent, and mostly online sessions, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The content will be substantially the same as the traditional Fellowship Program, with some changes necessitated by the new format and a desire to reduce costs to sponsors in these uncertain fiscal times.
The commitment of EPLC remains the same. The Fellowship Program will continue to be Pennsylvania's premier education policy leadership program for education, community, policy and advocacy leaders! The Fellowship Program begins with two 3-hour virtual sessions on September 17-18, and the Program ends with a graduation event in June 2021.
The application may be copied from the EPLC web site, but it must be submitted by mail or scanned and e-mailed, with the necessary signatures of applicant and sponsor.
If you would like to discuss any aspect of the Fellowship Program and its requirements, please contact EPLC Executive Director Ron Cowell at 412-298-4796 or COWELL@EPLC.ORG

Adopt the 2020 PSBA resolution for charter school funding reform
In this legislative session, PSBA has been leading the charge with the Senate, House of Representatives and the Governor’s Administration to push for positive charter reform. We’re now asking you to join the campaign: Adopt the resolution: We’re asking all school boards to adopt the 2020 resolution for charter school funding reform at your next board meeting and submit it to your legislators and to PSBA.

Over 275 PA school boards have adopted charter reform resolutions
Charter school funding reform continues to be a concern as over 275 school boards across the state have adopted a resolution calling for legislators to enact significant reforms to the Charter School Law to provide funding relief and ensure all schools are held to the same quality and ethics standards. Now more than ever, there is a growing momentum from school officials across the state to call for charter school funding reform. Legislators are hearing loud and clear that school districts need relief from the unfair funding system that results in school districts overpaying millions of dollars to charter schools.

Know Your Facts on Funding and Charter Performance. Then Call for Charter Change!
PSBA Charter Change Website:

The Network for Public Education Action Conference has been rescheduled to April 24-25, 2021 at the Philadelphia Doubletree Hotel


Any comments contained herein are my comments, alone, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any other person or organization that I may be affiliated with.
 

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