Friday, June 26, 2020

PA Ed Policy Roundup for June 26, 2020 It’s time to fix charter funding | Opinion


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PA Ed Policy Roundup for June 26, 2020
It’s time to fix charter funding | Opinion

Tweets from yesterday:
@HH_Schools Hatboro-Horsham board of school directors becomes the 270th locally elected Pennsylvania school board submitting a resolution calling for charter school funding reform. Has your district? @SenatorCollett . @RepTomMurt @RepToddStephens

#WesternBeaver board of school directors becomes the 269th locally elected Pennsylvania school board submitting a resolution calling for charter school funding reform. Has your district? @SenElderVogelJr #RepJimMarshall

#MuncySD board of school directors becomes the 268th locally elected Pennsylvania school board submitting a resolution calling for charter school funding reform. Has your district? @SenatorGeneYaw #RepGarthEverett

PSBA: Adopted charter reform resolutions
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.

Updated Reopening Guidance from PDE/Mathmatica June 24, 2020
On June 3, the Department of Education (PDE) issued Preliminary Guidance for Phased Reopening of Schools to summarize safe operations recommendations by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Pennsylvania Department of Health (DoH), and to provide a starting point for school leaders to consider in preparations for the upcoming year.
Today, we build on this guidance with a comprehensive reportOpens In A New Window prepared in partnership with the Regional Educational Laboratory (REL) Mid-Atlantic at MathematicaOpens In A New Window, one of the nation's foremost social policy research firms.  This report summarizes existing research on COVID-19 and generates a Pennsylvania-specific body of research—both qualitative and quantitative—that can inform decision making around completion of local health and safety plans, preparations for resumption of in-person teaching and learning, and development of supports for student and staff wellness—with attention to equity throughout.  Components include:

Pa.’s public schools are bleeding money because of the pandemic. It’s time to fix charter funding | Opinion
By Richard Robinson  Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor June 26, 2020
Richard Robinson is an elected school director for the York Suburban School District, and its legislative liaison. He writes from Springettsbury Township, Pa. 
Who ever said “every cloud has a silver lining” sure knew what he/she was saying. Take the COVID-19 pandemic. What an opportunity to keep driving public schools in Pennsylvania up to the edge of a cliff and over it. We all know the pandemic is causing a drop in tax revenue for the state. According to the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials, for public schools this could mean a decrease of anywhere from $850 million to $1 billion, but who’s counting? At the same time, Pennsylvania charter schools are entitled to more than $70 million in federal education stimulus funds this fiscal year to help them get through the financial crisis without experiencing any loss in revenue. What? Thanks to Pennsylvania’s current charter school funding formula overpayments to charter schools continue while school districts face critical funding challenges that have been accelerated by COVID-19. How is this possible you may ask? When calculating tuition rates for the upcoming school year, school districts are not permitted to deduct payments made to cyber/charter schools from the total expenditure.

Gov. Wolf Leads Bipartisan Effort in Calling on President, Congressional Leaders to Invest in Broadband Internet Access
Governor Wolf’s Website June 25, 2020
Eleven governors send letter calling for significant investments to bridge digital divide
As states continue to address the COVID-19 pandemic, including economic recovery efforts, Governor Tom Wolf and a bipartisan coalition of 11 governors today sent a letter urging the president and Congressional leaders to make critical investments to ensure that all Americans have access to broadband internet connectivity, which they say is critical infrastructure that’s vitally important to our economic future and national security. “An investment in broadband internet connectivity is an investment in our commonwealth’s future and prosperity. The critical need for high-speed internet has become clear in light of our efforts to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, as more families work and learn from home, businesses operate online services and patients access medical care through telehealth,” Gov. Wolf said. “Now, as Pennsylvania focuses on our economic recovery, it’s critical that broadband internet access becomes a reality for every community, and especially our rural areas. “It’s clear that this is more than a Pennsylvania issue – the digital divide exists in communities across the country,” Gov. Wolf said. “It’s in everyone’s best interest, especially as technology continues to evolve and advance, that we make a significant infrastructural investment.”

Confronted by protests, pandemic Philly schools mull delaying start of 2020-21 school year
By Chanel Hill  Special to the Capital-Star June 25, 2020
PHILADELPHIA — School District of Philadelphia administrators are considering pushing back the start of the 2020-21 school year. The first day of school is currently scheduled for Aug. 31, but Superintendent William Hite said Thursday during his weekly press briefing that the date could change “so staff are trained on new protocols.” Schools have been closed since the coronavirus outbreak began in Philadelphia in the middle of March. Over the last few months, “teachers and families have experienced loss,” Hite said. Massive protests against racial injustice also have overtaken the city for weeks. “We have to look at what training will be done to address the social and emotional aspects of all the things that individuals have been dealing with,” Hite said. Administrators are talking about anti-racism efforts, equity, cleaning between classes and overall sanitation as they make a decision about when to start the new school year.

No more ‘police’ in Philly schools; ‘safety officers’ in new uniforms coming this fall
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Posted: June 25, 2020- 9:06 PM
School police will no longer patrol city public school halls come September. Instead, “school safety officers” in less severe uniforms and with different job descriptions will be stationed throughout the Philadelphia School District. The move comes amid local and national pushes to remove police from schools. A handful of big-city districts, including those in Minneapolis, Denver, Seattle, and Oakland, have severed or backed away from relationships with police departments in the wake of the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, at the hands of police. The shift, which will not mean the replacement of the 300-plus men and women who have worked as school police, is not expressly linked to Floyd’s death and the resulting national activism. A change in the Pennsylvania state code stipulates that only sworn officers can be called “school police.” Philadelphia school security personnel, who do not carry guns, do not fit that description.

'We can't do this alone': Lancaster NAACP panelists want to transform education, but they need help
Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer June 26, 2020
The nation’s education system has long set Black and Hispanic students up to fail, but it’s not too late to change that. That was the main theme to the Lancaster NAACP’s virtual forum on education, held Thursday evening as the final part of the organization’s #WeAreDoneDying webinar series. From reversing the school-to-prison pipeline and creating an equitable funding system to adopting a curriculum and classroom that celebrates diversity, panelists said schools can begin patching up the damage the education system has inflicted on students of color. But it won’t be easy. “We can’t do this alone, and our children can’t do it alone,” School District of Lancaster Superintendent Damaris Rau said. “They need the adults in the community to fight for them.” Rau was a panelist alongside Leroy Hopkins, a retired German professor at Millersville University and president of the local African American Historical Society; Steve Sharp, a Hempfield School District counselor and president of the Pennsylvania School Counselor Association; and Susan Knoll, care coordinator at Franklin & Marshall College and School District of Lancaster parent. They discussed the road ahead, and how the coronavirus pandemic and escalating racial strife present opportunities to transform education for all students.

Black Lives Matter movement inspires students’ writing
Students and teachers participate in a 15-year-old program called Writers Matter that encourages teens to use their voice.
the Notebook June 25 — 11:36 am, 2020
Writers Matter is a program started in 2005 by Robert Vogel, then a La Salle education professor, in which teachers are trained to help their middle and high school students write their own stories. “It’s a motivational program to get kids to want to write,” said Vogel, who retired four years ago after more than four decades at La Salle. “It was developed to be integrated into the school day, taught by certified teachers, and sustained over the course of the whole year. Basically, we’re looking at ways of empowering these kids to use writing as a tool.” Today in Philadelphia, the program involves more than 3,000 students and 70 teachers in 14 schools. Anywhere from three to eight teachers might use the curriculum in a given school. “We begin to have them write about their lives and what they’re going through,” Vogel said. This year, as you can imagine, “there has been a drastic paradigm shift.”  First, students wrote about what it has been like learning in the COVID environment, with many sharing their fear and loneliness while schools were closed. Then came the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the protests against police violence. One of the schools where the Writers Matter program thrives is the Feltonville School of Arts & Sciences, which serves grades 6-8. Aubrey Stewart is an 8th-grade English Language Arts teacher there. “One thing I try to instill in all of them is that their voices are powerful,” said Stewart.

Leechburg Area passes $15.3M budget with 3.8% tax increase in West Leechburg
Trib Live by MADASYN LEE   | Thursday, June 25, 2020 3:00 p.m.
Leechburg Area School Board adopted a $15.3 million budget for the coming school year that increases taxes for West Leechburg property owners by 3.8%, but decreases taxes for ones in Leechburg and Gilpin. Board members voted 7-1 to adopt the budget during a virtual meeting Wednesday. Because Leechburg Area School District spans two counties, a complex formula intended to equalize taxes is used. Property owners in Westmoreland County’s West Leechburg will see their tax rate go up by 4.94 mills to 136.59 mills. The owner of a home assessed at $18,355 will owe about $2,507, an extra $89 a year.

Taxes Going Up With 2020-2021 Radnor School District Budget
Residents in Radnor Township will be paying more taxes, as the district's board recently adopted a budget with a tax hike.
Patch By Max Bennett, Patch Staff Jun 25, 2020 10:33 am ET
Taxes are going up in Radnor Township. (Shutterstock)
RADNOR TOWNSHIP, PA — Taxes are going up in Radnor with the newly approved 2020-2021 Radnor Township School District budget. The district's board on Tuesday voted to adopt the budget, which contains a 2.6 percent tax increase. According to district documents, the increase — which is .6478 mills, bringing the total millage to 25.5659 — was implemented to address a funding shortfall of $837,899. The district accounted for $101.4 in revenues and $102.7 in expenditures.

Area schools finalizing return to play safety plans
Beaver County Times By Andrew Chiappazzi @BCT_AChiappazzi Posted Jun 25, 2020
Area schools are required to formulate and publish a health and safety plan in order to resume practices and offseason workouts. Ten of the 18 public school districts in the area have completed that process. What do the plans look like? In order for high school sports programs to start practicing and conduct off-season workouts again, Gov. Tom Wolf required school districts to adopt a health and safety plan that would outline the precautions athletics programs would take to safeguard against the spread of COVID-19. The plan must adhere to the current state guidelines for the phased reopening of schools, be approved by respective school boards, and be publicly published on the school’s website. The Pennsylvania Department of Education offered a template schools could use to formulate their plans, but the districts largely have been left on their own to develop the procedures. The PIAA said it was crucial to allow for districts to develop their own plans because of the varying needs and resources of each district throughout the state. “Allowing voluntary activities to commence at PIAA member schools as early as the approval by the local board is a significant move to allow students to be students,” PIAA executive director Dr. Robert Lombardi said in a release earlier this month. “We are very appreciative and supportive of the Governor’s staff and PDE for allowing our input and having discussion of opening schools for voluntary workouts and activities.”

DeVos issues rule steering more virus aid to private schools
Lancaster Online By COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer June 25, 2020
The Trump administration on Thursday moved forward with a policy ordering public schools across the U.S. to share coronavirus relief funding with private schools at a higher rate than federal law typically requires. Under a new rule issued by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, school districts are ordered to set aside a portion of their aid for private schools using a formula based on the total number of private school students in the district. The policy has been contested by public school officials who say the funding should be shared based on the number of low-income students at local private schools rather than their total enrollments. That's how funding is shared with private schools under other federal rules that Congress referenced in the legislation creating the relief aid. But DeVos on Thursday said the funding is separate from other federal aid and was meant to support all students. “There is nothing in the law Congress passed that would allow districts to discriminate against children and teachers based on private school attendance and employment," DeVos said in a call with reporters. The difference between the two formulas amounts to tens of millions of dollars. In Louisiana, for example, private schools are estimated to get at least 267% more under DeVos' formula. In the state’s Orleans Parish, at least 77% of its relief allotment would end up going to private schools. The Education Department issued the rule through a process that's typically used in emergencies and immediately gives the policy the force of law. DeVos said urgent action was needed after dozens of private schools permanently closed as a result of the pandemic. She called it a “looming crisis” for the nation. DeVos is a longtime backer of private schools and has championed school choice through her career. Since last year, she's been pushing a plan to provide tax credits for scholarships sending students to private schools or other education options. She and Vice President Mike Pence promoted the plan Tuesday at a school choice event in Wisconsin, but the measure has yet to gain traction in Congress.

DeVos Partially Retreats in Fight Over COVID Aid and Private School Students
Education Week By Andrew Ujifusa on June 25, 2020 11:32 AM
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos is backing off somewhat from her controversial push for school districts to make coronavirus relief available to all local private school students, following a salvo of criticism from education officials and groups.  The new interim final rule, released Thursday by the U.S. Department of Education, gives school districts choices for how they distribute K-12 aid money from Congress. And ultimately, the rule would give districts the option to set aside the aid for a subset of private school students like they typically do, instead of the broader population of those students, as DeVos had previously sought. This interim final rule will go into effect immediately and has the full force of law, although there's still a process for the public to provide comment for 30 days. However, there could be legal action in response to it. The Education Department estimated that the interim rule could affect between 6 and 8 percent of the roughly $13 billion in aid for school districts under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. The shift by DeVos represents a qualified victory for public school officials and advocates and a corresponding setback for private school advocates. But it could also force some school districts into difficult decisions about how to allocate money among schools. And it could complicate district-based responses to the coronavirus that aren't necessarily tailored to individual schools. 


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 260 PA school boards adopt charter reform resolutions
Charter school funding reform continues to be a concern as over 260 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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