Monday, August 24, 2020

PA Ed Policy Roundup for August 24, 2020: “the company managing PA Cyber Charter...listed a staggering fund balance of $82 million in 2017-18”


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PA Ed Policy Roundup for August 24, 2020
“the company managing PA Cyber Charter...listed a staggering fund balance of $82 million in 2017-18”


Learn more about the history of cyber charters, their academic performance and the impact of cybers on your local district school.
Cyber Charter Schools Webinar August 26, 1:00 pm
Free and Open to the Public · Hosted by Councilmember Helen Gym
As families across the state plan for the start of the school year, join Councilmember Helen Gym, PA Auditor General Eugene DePasquale, Donna Cooper, Executive Director of Public Citizens for Children and Paige Joki, Staff Attorney at Education Law Center for a discussion on Cyber Charters. This event is free and open to the public. RSVP and submit questions for the experts at: tinyurl.com/cybercharters


If #BlackLivesMatter, why does Pennsylvania have the most racist school funding in the nation? | Opinion
Penn Live Opinion By Crystal Echeverria Posted Aug 22, 9:12 AM
Crystal Echeverria is a student in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
I am a student in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. I am not blind to what has been happening for decades in my state. School districts with large minority populations are under-funded by millions of dollars every year in basic and Special Education funding. Some of the most underfunded school districts include Harrisburg School District (the capital city) which was underfunded by $37 million, Reading by $101 million, Scranton by $29 million, City of Philadelphia by $440 million and York by $59 Million, every year! Even though they signed school funding formula laws, the Governor and General Assembly continue to refuse to fix these massive funding shortfalls. As a Harrisburg resident, I have seen the consequences of this underfunding first hand. Bathrooms have no doors, textbooks fall apart in your hands and teachers let kids run the school. One would think the state government would put a little more care into its capital city! Seeing beautiful schools in the suburbs and crumbling schools in cities, even as a young student, I questioned what was going on. What’s also interesting is that no one knows or wants to tell the truth about this massive discrimination. When I asked my teachers and principals, and spoke in class about it, they had no idea the discrimination was so bad.

Editorial: Stop pointing fingers on school decisions
Pottstown Mercury Editorial August 23, 2020
Arguments over the best way to restart school continue to echo even as the 2020-21 academic year is about to open. While state officials have offered plenty of advice and guidelines to school districts, it’s ultimately up to local school directors and administrators to determine how to provide the best education possible without jeopardizing the health and safety of students, employees and the overall community during a pandemic. We’ve been dismayed at the tenor of much of this debate. Too many people are acting as though their opinion on this subject is the obvious right answer while questioning the motivations of those who disagree with them. The fact is that there is no obvious right answer. Each of the popular arguments on school reopening has some merits and some drawbacks. The bottom line is that leaders have to choose from a menu of unappetizing selections to decide a way forward. They must also understand that they may have to revisit the decision based on circumstances, and that someone is going to be angry no matter what they do.

“the company managing PA Cyber Charter School...listed a staggering fund balance of $82 million in 2017-18. The report also found that the school had spent $622,000 on lobbying, and from 2014-18, it had awarded a 50% pay raise to its CEO and a 148% pay raise to its [COO]”
Former Commonwealth Charter Academy Student Kenneth Gatten: We must amend Pa.’s charter school law now
TRIBUNE-REVIEW | Saturday, August 22, 2020 8:32 p.m.
In a recent report, Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DePasquale called Pennsylvania’s charter school law “the worst in the nation” because it prevents the state from “performing full reviews of charter management companies.” Indeed, a 2016 report by the Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA) finds the PSBA had to take charters to court to force them to divulge how they were spending taxpayer money. The PSBA also found that in the 2014-15 school year, charter schools were paid $294.8 million for special education supplemental money but only spent $193.1 million on special education services — pocketing the rest. Under Pennsylvania’s charter law, cybers are paid the same as brick-and-mortar charters, even though their costs per students are significantly less. As a result, DePasquale found in his report that Lincoln Learning Solutions — the company managing PA Cyber Charter School, which enrolls over 10,000 students — listed a staggering fund balance of $82 million in 2017-18. The report also found that the school had spent $622,000 on lobbying, and from 2014-18, it had awarded a 50% pay raise to its CEO and a 148% pay raise to its chief operating officer. But Pennsylvania’s charter law prevents any closer inspection of charters’ finances. Only after the federal government got involved in 2013 was PA Cyber Charter Schools’ founder, Nick Trombetta, indicted for siphoning $8 million in taxpayer funds to private companies and sentenced to 20 months in federal prison.

Were funds really needed for cyber charters?
Lehighton Times News By Rita Spinelli Published August 21. 2020 11:50AM
Rita Spinelli is vice president of the Lehighton Area school board.
It’s time we shine a light on a critically important issue and start asking some questions. As Pennsylvania’s school districts face revenue shortfalls of $1 billion or more due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Pennsylvania’s charter schools stand to see a windfall of pandemic relief funding while experiencing no loss of revenue. First, under the recently enacted state budget, charter schools will receive $15 million in state health and safety grants to address COVID-19-related health and safety needs. This is much-needed funding for school districts and brick-and-mortar charter schools that plan to offer some sort of adjusted schedule for in-person learning in the fall. But for cyber charter schools that offer all of their instruction virtually, this is simply free money. Next, under the federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief fund, charter schools are entitled to $71 million in emergency one-time funds to help schools respond to COVID-19 impacts. Brick-and-mortar charter schools reasonably incurred additional costs transitioning to an alternative learning system after school buildings were closed in March. In contrast, cyber charter schools should not have incurred the same costs, since their usual instructional method is virtual. Finally, at least 26 charter schools were awarded Paycheck Protection Program loans totaling between $24 million and $56 million which may be used for limited purposes such as payroll costs, continuation of health care benefits, interest on mortgage obligations, and rent and utility payments. Given that charter schools are publicly funded schools, the need for these loans should be questioned, especially in light of the fact that charter schools experienced no loss of revenue due to the pandemic.

Blogger note: Beaver County districts have been added to this list
School Districts Reportedly Opening Virtual Only as of August 24, 2020
Keystone State Education Coalition
Blogger note: this is work in process. Please let me know if you have additions or corrections to this list

“PA Schools Work, a group that advocates for traditional brick-and-mortar public schools, recently created a Check Before You Choose  online resource where families can compare public cyber-charter schools to traditional public schools. “The impetus for creating that was sort of recognizing the certain challenges, with respect to the pandemic, and the really difficult choices that a lot of parents have as school districts were formulating their reopening plans,” said Hannah Barrick, assistant executive director of the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials, who worked on the project. “They’re certainly some pretty significant financial implications for every student that leaves a school district and enrolls in a cyber charter school.” For every regular education student that leaves a school district for a cyber or charter school, it costs the district $12,000 to $13,000 on average; the average for special education students is closer to $20,000, she said. The tool also aims to inform parents that many of the traditional brick and mortar public schools created robust online programs that are very different from what students experienced in the spring, Barrick said.”
Enrollments rise in cyber, charter and private schools
Citizens Voice By KATHLEEN BOLUS STAFF WRITER August 23, 2020
Enrollment in cyber, charter and private schools is rising in Northeast Pennsylvania as school districts finalize their reopening plans amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Commonwealth Charter Academy, which has a location in Dickson City, expects as many as 17,000 students to enroll in its cyber school program statewide — a more than 65% jump. The Diocese of Scranton has received about 8% more inquiries about its parochial schools for the upcoming school year. At the private Summit Christian Academy in South Abington Twp., 25% of the 75 students will be new this year. “It comes down to three main wants,” said Commonwealth Charter Academy spokesman Timothy Eller. Parents do not want their children to catch the coronavirus while at school, they don’t necessarily want their children to wear masks all day in school, and they want to be comfortable and confident in the programs school districts are offering, he said. As of Aug. 20, enrollment at the academy, which changes hourly, included 707 students from Lackawanna County; 401 from Luzerne County; 105 from Wayne County; 57 from Susquehanna County; and 46 from Wyoming County. Local superintendents are confident in their district’s online learning programs. Valley View School District’s full virtual program is “far superior” to any offered at an already established cyber-charter school, Superintendent Michael Boccella, Ed.D., said during a July school board meeting.

We can only open schools safely if we follow the rules | Opinion
By Rick Askey  Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor August 24, 2020
As the summer draws to a close, we find ourselves on the doorstep of a school year like no other. And, across the state, so many students, educators, support professionals, parents, and school leaders are asking the same questions. What are the rules? What can we do to reopen? What will school look like this year? Is it safe? The 180,000 dedicated education professionals I represent as president of the Pennsylvania State Education Association (PSEA) are eager to return to their schools and classrooms. They want to be back with their students and colleagues. But they want to do it in the safest possible way. They want to protect their students and their students’ families as well as their colleagues and their colleagues’ families. And, like everything else Pennsylvanians have been asked to do to slow the spread of the coronavirus, we can only open schools safely if we follow the rules.

Teacher shortage forces Boyertown to start school online
So many teachers have said they will not teach in Boyertown's school buildings that the district has abandoned its plan for partial in-person instruction and will start the school year online only. The change was announced in a letter sent home to parents Friday and signed by Marybeth Torchia who, for the second time in as many years, has been tapped to run the district while a new superintendent is sought. The district has set a "target date" of Oct. 5 for a potential return to partial-in-person instruction. "Our professional and support staffing shortages have significantly exceeded this administration’s expectations," Torchia wrote. "Our staffing shortages have grown and continue to grow on a daily basis — sometimes by five or more employees per day," Torchia wrote. "Even with bringing back our furloughed Temporary Professional Employees and tapping into our available substitute resources, the bottom line is that there simply are not enough human resources available to cover the face-to-face learning needs of our students safely and with health as a priority." "We understand that many will be disappointed, even angered, by this current development. We know that it directly impacts the lives of families across our district in countless ways. Please know that this decision was not made lightly," "Torcia wrote.

“The overall share of tips related to suicide and self-harm, however, more than doubled once schools closed statewide in March.”
Schools stare down teen mental health crisis as they prepare for largely virtual year
PA Capital Star By  Elizabeth Hardison August 23, 2020
Pennsylvania schools have retrofitted buildings and overhauled class schedules to protect public health this fall – but they’ve said less about how they’ll support their students’ mental health, even though state and federal data show that young people are increasingly contemplating suicide and self harm.  Reports of suicidal threats and self-harm tendencies among Pennsylvania school children shot up after Gov. Tom Wolf ordered schools to close in March, new data from the state Attorney General show.  The state’s Safe2Say hotline, which was created in the wake of the 2018 Parkland, Fla. school shooting to field threats of student violence, saw the number of tips related to suicide and suicidal ideation rise by 18 percent during the 2019-2020 school year compared to the year prior, according to a report published this month by Attorney General Josh Shapiro, whose office oversees the program. Consistent with last year, concerns about bullying and cyberbullying were the dominant source of tips to the Safe2Say hotline. Calls related to suicide constituted the second-largest share of tips, followed by reports of cutting and self-harm. 

‘He’s not being educated': For students with autism and severe disabilities, the pandemic is a disaster. What comes next?
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham,August 24, 2020
The behaviors started a few days after COVID-19 closed schools indefinitely in March: Eleven-year-old Ronan Strouse would bite one arm, issue frequent short, high-pitched yells, bang his leg hard. Ronan, who is intellectually disabled, has autism and other complicated conditions, can’t carry on a conversation, but he had words enough to ask his mother: “School sick?” “Yes,” Celine Nace would tell her son. “School is sick.”  Ronan Strouse peeks out from under a sweater while on a walk with his mother, Celine Nace, and his sister Barron. As a fifth grader in the Upper Perkiomen School District, Ronan was supposed to have virtual lessons with his teacher, and a host of services such as occupational and speech therapy on the computer, too. But that didn’t work for more than perhaps 10 minutes a week; Ronan would refuse to sit, walk away, unable to grasp or tolerate what he was supposed to do. The problems continued this summer, when he had online-only services as mandated by his special-education plan. “He got nothing out of it,” Nace said. “He’s not being educated.” Come next week, school starts again, and Ronan will have three hours of in-person instruction at Upper Perkiomen Middle School four days a week. He’s supposed to spend every afternoon online. That’s untenable, his mother said — and she’s worried he’ll never catch up.

How will kids stay masked and distanced on school buses? That has Lehigh Valley parents and school officials worried.
By JACQUELINE PALOCHKO THE MORNING CALL | AUG 23, 2020 AT 6:00 AM
When it came to deciding whether her 14-year-old son should do virtual learning this fall or a hybrid schedule that lets him go back to school two days a week, Lisa Luciano was comfortable in sending her son to Parkland High School given the district’s social distancing guidelines. But Luciano was less confident about how social distancing would occur if her son Logan rode the bus home every day like he did last year when she worked at a local bank. This year, she has decided to drop her son off every morning on her way into work and take a late lunch break every afternoon to pick him up. It’ll be tricky to coordinate her work schedule, but Luciano said that’s better than the bus option. “I’m not comfortable with the kids being that close to each other,” she said. It’s a sentiment that many parents have, even as they come to terms with sending their children back to school. As districts decide on reopening plans that space out desks and enforce mask-wearing, they also need to figure out how to get children to school in a way that protects them and the bus drivers.

Bucks districts weigh busing private school students while closed during pandemic
Chris English Bucks County Courier Times August 23, 2020
Private school students and their parents living in the Pennsbury School District are breathing a sigh of relief. The school board changed course at its virtual meeting Thursday night and decided to start transporting students to and from the private schools they attend starting Sept. 8. Pennsbury's previous position had been that it wasn't obligated to provide such transportation since it won't be busing its own students for several more months. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, Pennsbury is offering only virtual instruction through January. "In the past few weeks, the board has focused on the appropriate education plan for Pennsbury students," board President T.R. Kannan said. "To minimize the impact of this decision on others, we decided to provide transportation for non-public schools. Although we are not legally required to do this, we want to support these students and their families." In making the move, the district joins several others in Bucks County going all virtual the first several weeks or months of the school year but still providing transportation to private schools. Included in that category are Bensalem, Bristol Township, Centennial, Council Rock and Neshaminy.

Commentary: This week I started teaching again. Why I’ll be sleeping in a backyard tent
By EMILY KILBOURN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE | AUG 21, 2020 AT 8:00 AM
I am a high school English teacher and have been for 14 years. I am also a doctoral candidate, mother of a rising kindergartner and am married to a fellow high school teacher. When I return to school this week for the professional development that will precede our students’ start, I plan on kissing my 5-year-old and my husband goodbye. I’m going to school in my scrubs, wearing my personal protective equipment, keeping the windows in my classroom open and beginning to troubleshoot teaching and learning under the hybrid model. When I return home, however, I will no longer set foot inside our home. My husband's medical conditions put him at greater risk for grave health repercussions or death from COVID-19, so I'm sleeping in a tent in our backyard and isolating myself from my husband and young son. We live in a modest home, not configured for quarantine.

Lancaster County School reopening plans: Here's (nearly) everything you need to know
Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer Aug 23, 2020
In-person. Hybrid. Virtual.
You’ve heard those words over and over the past couple months, as school administrators, board members and teachers debate how, and when, to reopen this fall. Now, they’re finally being put into action. On Tuesday, the first batch of Lancaster County school districts begin their 2020-21 school year, each with its own, unique instructional plan. There are a few consistencies, however, such as universal mask-wearing, which is required by the Pennsylvania Department of Health, Guidance from the state says schools in Lancaster County, which has "moderate" COVID-19 transmission rates, should reopen fully virtual or using a hybrid model that decreases the number of students in a school and enables social distancing. It does not recommend reopening fully in-person. Here’s how each county public school district plans to reopen.

Central League officially delays start of fall high school sports
The PIAA’s decision last Friday to allow individual school districts and leagues to move forward with fall sports starting Monday created confusion for some athletes in the Central League. A number of athletes called their respective schools and coaches looking for answers, according to Springfield's Glenn Mallon, chairperson of the Central League athletic directors. Generally, the kids wanted to know if they should begin the process of getting ready for the season or would they have to wait to get clearance from their respective schools? As an answer, the league’s athletic directors decided to release a statement Sunday to clarify the situation. “On Friday, August 21st, the PIAA Board of Directors voted to allow member schools to begin fall sports on Monday, August 24th," the statement read. “Based on the guidance from the Chester and Montgomery County Health Departments, Central League schools have agreed to delay the start of the 2020 fall season. “CAL schools may continue voluntary workouts while awaiting further instruction from our local school boards and superintendents.” The timing of the PIAA "decision" was to allow for a week of "heat acclimatization" for football. There are 12 teams in the Central League spread out across Delaware, Chester and Montgomery counties.

“Along with Allison, Pittsburgh Public Schools athletic director Karen Arnold also voted no. Joining them in opposition were three members who individually represent school boards, principals and superintendents. Department of Education representative Brian Campbell was one of two board members absent Friday.”
WPIAL treasurer Michael Allison voted ‘no’ to starting fall sports. Here’s why.
Trib Live By: Chris Harlan Saturday, August 22, 2020 | 12:27 AM
Hopewell principal Michael Allison is a former high school athlete and coach, the treasurer of the WPIAL and president of the Pennsylvania Principals Association. He’s also one of five PIAA board members Friday who voted against starting fall sports next week. Allison understands his vote won’t be popular with many, but it’s a decision he didn’t take lightly. “The last thing on earth that I ever want to do is cancel high school sports,” Allison said. “I’ve given years to the WPIAL in service to kids. I think a lot of people think I just wanted to cancel sports. That’s not the point.” The vote passed 25-5, allowing fall sports to start Monday. Gov. Tom Wolf wanted youth sports delayed until January to prevent potential coronavirus spread, a “strong recommendation” that key departments in his administration also supported. The state departments of health and education both backed the youth sports delay. That’s advice Allison couldn’t ignore. “I strongly believe that as school administrators, we have a responsibility to follow the recommendation of the Department of Health, the governor and the Department of Education,” he said. “That recommendation was made. All of us have health and safety plans about following the recommendations.”

“The five voting against proceeding were Nathan Mains of the school boards association; Leeann Wentzel, the school administrators rep; Jonathan Bauer, the principals association rep; Mike Allinson of District 7; and Karen Arnold of District 8.”
Fall high school sports decision: PIAA says let them play
By KEITH GROLLER THE MORNING CALL | AUG 21, 2020 AT 3:31 PM
By a 25-5 vote, the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association decided Friday to proceed with a fall sports schedule. The board also unanimously passed a proposal to allow each school district an opportunity to make its own choices regarding participation and could even allow schools to move their fall seasons to the spring. After a two-week pause following Gov. Tom Wolf’s “strong recommendation” to suspend all sports until Jan. 1 due to the coronavirus pandemic, the PIAA decided that sports could continue with strict adherence to prescribed COVID-19 guidelines. The five voting against proceeding were Nathan Mains of the school boards association; Leeann Wentzel, the school administrators rep; Jonathan Bauer, the principals association rep; Mike Allinson of District 7; and Karen Arnold of District 8. The board’s decision will be popular with thousands of student-athletes who didn’t want to miss out on another sports season after the winter sports season ended abruptly on March 12 and the spring season was eliminated entirely by the coronavirus outbreak. “However many thousands of kids there are in the Lehigh Valley who play sports, I am sure for many of them, they haven’t been as happy as they are right now — since March,” said Bob Hartman, Whitehall athletic director and District 11 chairman.

PIAA directors had varied reasons for voting no to fall sports
By Tribune News Service Updated Aug 22, 3:50 PM; Posted Aug 22, 3:50 PM
The PIAA's vote to move forward with the high school fall sports seasons passed by a wide margin Friday, but the decision was not unanimous. Five of 30 PIAA board members present voted against the measure for varying reasons as the COVID-19 pandemic lingers. District 8 chairwoman Karen Arnold was one of those who cast a vote against fall sports in part because students in her district will spend a good portion of the fall taking virtual classes. District 8 encompasses the Pittsburgh City League, and Arnold serves as the athletic director. "With all Pittsburgh Public Schools students beginning the first nine weeks fully online, the District has recommended the postponement of fall sports out of concern for the health and safety of students and staff," she said.

“On Aug. 10 the school district suspended voluntary workouts for student-athletes after it was learned an individual within the athletic department had tested positive for COVID-19.”
Hanover Area suspends start of fall sports practices
Citizens Voice By STEVE BENNETT STAFF WRITER Aug 23, 2020
The start of the fall sports season is on hold for one school in the Wyoming Valley Conference after Hanover Area announced Sunday that practices will be temporarily suspended. Today was scheduled to be the first date high school athletic teams could begin holding mandatory practices in preparation for the 2020 fall sports season. Instead, Hanover Area will wait until its school board meets this week to determine if the school will participate in a fall sports season. The date of the board meeting has not been announced, but is expected to be sometime Monday. “We are suspending fall sports until the board decides this week,” Hanover Area athletic director Mike McCree said. The decision covers all athletic teams at Hanover Area and there will be no practices, voluntary or mandatory, until the school boards makes the ultimate call whether to move forward or not.

Sports on hold at Susquehanna Community School District
The decision was made by the superintendent.
WNEP Web Staff Published: 9:00 PM EDT August 23, 2020
SUSQUEHANNA, Pa. — The Susquehanna Community School District announced that all sports have been canceled. According to the Saber's football coach, no one on the coaching staff or any student-athletes have tested positive for COVID-19. The decision was made by the superintendent. Officials say because the county cases reached a certain number, along with the district following a hybrid learning model, they believe it was in the best interest of the community to not hold sports right now. Sports practices have been canceled for the next two weeks and then the district will reassess the situation.

Safety or socialization?: School leaders ‘agonize’ over COVID-era back-to-school plans
WHYY By Avi Wolfman-Arent August 21, 2020  Listen 11:14
This story is from The Pulse, a weekly health and science podcast.
Subscribe on Apple PodcastsStitcher or wherever you get your podcasts.
The hallways at Camden Prep look like they’re frozen in time.
Student work from early spring still decorates the walls of this New Jersey charter school. Empty desks cluster in empty classrooms. Posters detail daily assignments handed out months ago. The only thing missing is the kids. “Welcome to a school building with no children,” said administrator Natalie Cooper. In mid-March, American education came to a sudden, unprecedented halt. Schools across the country shifted as fast as they could to online learning. It was one of the hardest things many educators have ever done in their careers — until now. “The biggest hurdle to overcome has been the uncertainty,” said Cooper. “We’re not coming back. We’re coming back. We’re not coming back…” We’re coming back. We’re not coming back. That doubt hangs over every school leader in America — from those that run gigantic, sprawling school districts to those that run small private schools. And this fall, each is making a decision: Do I open my doors? The people in charge are trained as educators, not scientists. And they’re trying to solve a problem that keeps changing. Normally, it takes years for scientific thought to migrate into real-life practice. Today, the public is asking lay people to make real-time sense of a disease scientists are learning about on the fly. How that decision-making process works at different schools reveals much about America’s education system — which isn’t so much a system as it is a federation of local entities with their own rules, customs, and mascots.

Schools aim to feed students — including remote learners — this fall
BOB BATZ JR., JOSHUA AXELROD AND DAN GIGLER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette AUG 23, 2020
In the spring, when COVID-19 restrictions shut down schools all over, school districts and nonprofits moved to help keep children fed no matter where they were, helped by the U.S. Department of Agriculture quickly relaxing its rules on who could get meals and who could distribute them. Now that educators are gearing up again for classes to resume in the fall, officials across the Pittsburgh region are committed to keeping the kids fed, but — as with everything during the pandemic — complications are abundant and constantly changing. The USDA has not yet extended its rule waivers to the 2020-21 school year, which worries school districts starting classes this week and next. “We know these meals have been a lifeline for some of these kids,”  Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank’s Karen Dreyer said.

Critics blast recommendation on virtual schooling
Public comment was plenty at Wednesday's Delaware County Council meeting as residents had their say on Chester County Health Department's recommendation for virtual schooling through Oct. 9 and transitioning to a more in-person model after that. On Friday, Aug. 14, the Chester County Health Department, which is overseeing all COVID-19 services for Delaware County, made a recommendation that public and private schools use virtual instruction through Oct. 9 as part of a mitigation plan. This virtual learning model does not apply to special education or vocational career training students. Most school districts in Delaware County had already opted for this. However, after this announcement, the Radnor, Wallingford Swarthmore and Ridley school districts decided to change their plans from in-person hybrid models to abide by the guidance. As a result, a number of residents from Radnor Township and Wallingford Swarthmore school districts voiced their discontent at the county meeting, as council members themselves had varied opinions.

Pottstown Schools Cut Staff, Busing, Offer Meals
Digital Notebook Blog by Evan Brandt Friday, August 21, 2020
As coronavirus impacts continue to ripple through the rhythm of "regular life," the Pottstown School Board is taking steps to adapt. Thursday night the board voted unanimously to allow the administration to furlough workers whose work has vanished with the absence of students and teachers in the borough's school buildings. As much as possible, said Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez, hours will be reduced or work re-purposed to keep as many people on the payroll as possible. Even for those who are furloughed, or have their hours reduced, the district will continue to pay its share of their medical insurance, explained Deena Cellini, the district's personnel director. The district has also come up with a way to continue to distribute breakfasts and lunches to its students, brilliant in its simplicity. Every Monday, anyone with one or more students in school can come to Pottstown High School between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. and pick up five breakfasts and five lunches at the cafeteria door adjacent to the auditorium at the front of the school. Unlike in the spring, Rodriguez said there will be more variety in the meals. "All students are eligible," he said urging parents to take advantage of the benefit and using the money saved for other needs. Those without vehicles, or who are otherwise unable to come and pick up the meals, can register to have them delivered, said Rodriguez.

“Students in the Valley started returning to classes on Wednesday with Selinsgrove Area followed by Milton Area and Warrior Run on Thursday. Five schools — Line Mountain, Midd-West, Mount Carmel Area, Our Lady of Lourdes and Shamokin Area — return tomorrow. Southern Columbia Area returns Tuesday, Shikellamy, Northumberland Christian School and Meadowbrook Christian Academy return the day after that, Sunbury Christian Academy on Aug. 31, Danville Area on Sept. 3, Mifflinburg Area on Sept. 8 and Lewisburg Area on Sept. 9 and 10.”
A different world: Central Susquehanna Valley students returning for a school year unlike any that have come before
The Daily Item By Justin Strawser jstrawser@dailyitem.com August 23, 2020
William James walked into Oaklyn Elementary School with his 9-year-old son on Thursday, having fought COVID-19 twice in the last five months. James, of Sunbury, is the parent of one of approximately 900 students who have chosen some form of online learning at Shikellamy School District for the 2020-21 school year. He said he wanted to keep his son home this academic school year to avoid infection. “I don’t want to see him get sick,” said James about his fourth-grade son Mardai James, during Shikellamy’s Chromebook handouts. “I’ve had it twice already and I beat it both times. I don’t want him to go through what I went through. It’s no joke.” Students and teachers in the Valley are returning to a different world as classes resume for the first time since the state shut down in-person education in March due to COVID-19. The state requires all students and staff to wear masks during the school day during the 2020-21 academic year. District leaders are setting up sanitizing stations, spacing students out in the classrooms and offering online learning for parents who wants to keep their child out of the classroom.

Pa. lawmakers concerned ‘guidance’ for schools could open the door to covid-19 lawsuits
Trib Live by CYNTHIA FERNANDEZ | SPOTLIGHT PA | Friday, August 21, 2020 1:25 p.m.
HARRISBURG — As students prepare to begin a highly unusual school year, Pennsylvania lawmakers on Wednesday told Wolf administration officials they’re concerned the state’s covid-19 guidance could open districts to lawsuits. Potential liability should students or staff become infected with covid-19 at school is a top concern among education leaders. Even now, some districts are making changes to plans to operate in person, virtually or through a hybrid model as the state updates its recommendations. While the Wolf administration ordered the closure of schools statewide in April, it has left decisions about fall operations to local districts. The departments of health and education in July released guidelines recommending, among other policies, that schools keep students at least six feet apart and serve meals in classrooms. But during a joint House and Senate hearing Wednesday, the minority chair of the Senate Education Committee told top state officials that district leaders don’t see the guidance as optional.

Editorial: Does state’s ‘guidance’ open schools to liability?
TRIBUNE-REVIEW Editorial  | Saturday, August 22, 2020 3:27 p.m.
There are lots of things to worry about as the 2020-21 school year gets education back into gear. Do we send the kids back into the classroom in spite of covid-19? Does the coronavirus caution us to keep them at home? Do we do both? Do we strike a balance in the middle? What about kindergartners who are just embarking on their educational journey? What about the high school seniors who need to be prepared for college next year? There are so many valid issues regardless of which path is taken for kids with special educational needs, health challenges and developmental delays. There are just as many for teachers and other employees. But there is another issue for state and school board officials to grapple with. Liability. According to reporting from Spotlight PA, the issue of what happens if students or staff members contract the disease that shut down Pennsylvania schools in March is now a top concern.

Republicans are trying to survive an anti-Trump wave in the Philly suburbs: ‘A lot of Democrats vote for me’
Inquirer by Andrew Seidman, Posted: August 23, 2020- 5:00 AM
As a light summer shower passed through Delaware County earlier this month, State Sen. Tom Killion knocked on doors in Aston Township, asking people how they held up during a recent storm and handing out campaign flyers. Walking around a solidly Republican area where Donald Trump campaigned in 2016 and easily won that year, Killion came across Kevin Uff, 64, a Steelworkers union member who worked 44 years at the old South Philadelphia refinery and retired shortly before it exploded in 2019. Uff, standing in his driveway, identified himself as a Democrat. “It’s OK, a lot of Democrats vote for me,” said Killion, wearing a face mask as he kept his distance in the cul-de-sac. “I’m a moderate Republican.” Uff soon asked Killion for his thoughts on Trump. “I don’t like the rhetoric at all,” Killion said. He went on to explain that he gets along with members of both parties in Harrisburg. They work to get things done, Killion said, and— “I understand all that,” Uff cut in, “but I would think that with the antics that he’s pulled over the last 3½ years that you would definitely say, ‘I could never vote for this guy.’ ”

Philly school board rejects tax break for Hilco’s redevelopment of the former refinery site
Inquirer by Andrew Maykuth and Kristen A. Graham, August 21, 2020
In a surprise move, the Philadelphia school board has rejected a proposal backed by Mayor Jim Kenney to extend an important tax break to the largest development project in the city, a former South Philadelphia refinery site that is set to be rebuilt into a massive logistics hub. The school board on Thursday night failed to muster the five votes needed to approve the Keystone Opportunity Zone designation, which three progressives on the school board opposed. Businesses in Keystone Opportunity Zones pay little to no state and local business taxes through an assortment of tax credits, tax waivers, and tax abatements. Hilco Redevelopment Partners, a Chicago firm that bought the 1,300-acre Philadelphia Energy Solutions site out of bankruptcy in June for $225.5 million, had pressed the city to approve an extension of the property’s Keystone Opportunity Zone (KOZ) status, which was granted in 2014 and was set to expire in 2023. Hilco has said the tax breaks are important to its project, which will require hundreds of millions of dollars to clean up environmentally before the property can be rebuilt. Mayor Kenney, who appoints school board members, and Councilman Kenyatta Johnson, whose district includes the property, had asked the school board to approve the KOZ status. The school board’s approval is required since the KOZ designation potentially impacts its revenue stream. Hilco has promised to pay a $1.25 million annual payment to the Philadelphia School District in lieu of school taxes.

Blogger note: PA Students First PAC’s Jeff Yass of the Susquehanna International Group is featured at $11 million in contributions; the DeVos Family is listed at $3.5 million
Conservative Plutocrats Pour Enormous Sums of Money into GOP Super PACs
Center for Media and Democracy By Alex Kotch August 17th, 2020
Dozens of enormously wealthy individuals, couples, families, or corporations have donated $1 million or more to conservative super PACs in the 2020 cycle, according to a CMD analysis of federal campaign finance data. These donors combined to give nearly $233 million to conservative super PACs, amounting to nearly 60 percent of the total money raised by the PACs.
The donations have fueled nearly $488 million in election spending by independent groups—including super PACs and “dark money” nonprofit organizations—so far in the current election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. This total, as of August 17, is less than the more than $563 million spent by outside groups at this point in the 2016 election cycle, but it’s easily the second-highest amount since the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling in 2010, which allowed unlimited corporate money in U.S. elections. Of the $337 million worth of independent expenditures made so far by super PACs, liberal-leaning PACs have spent more ($194 million) than conservative PACs ($136 million). If this trend holds, it will be the first time that liberal super PACs outspend their conservative counterparts since 2014. The current discrepancy is due in part to a competitive Democratic presidential primary that saw super PACs spend tens of millions now-presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN). With the coronavirus ravaging the South and West and threatening the Midwest, President Donald Trump’s disastrous handling of the resulting health and economic crises, and GOP lawmakers scared to contradict the president, Republicans are looking at what could be a very bad November for them. Biden is consistently ahead of Trump in many battleground state polls, and a number of Republican senators’ seats are in danger. Given this dynamic, it’s likely right-wing megadonors will pour even more money into outside spending groups over the next 11 weeks before Election Day. Forty-four individuals, couples, families, or corporations have donated $1 million or more to conservative super PACs in the 2020 cycle so far, according to a CMD analysis of federal campaign finance records.

Iowa governor’s push to reopen schools descends into chaos
AP By RYAN J. FOLEY August 19, 2020
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An aggressive push by Iowa’s pro-Trump governor to reopen schools amid a worsening coronavirus outbreak has descended into chaos, with some districts and teachers rebelling and experts calling the scientific benchmarks used by the state arbitrary and unsafe. The clash in the Midwest has illustrated in condensed form the tension between science and politics — and between economic concerns and health fears — that has characterized the nation’s response to the outbreak from the White House on down. The virus has devastated the U.S. economy and killed over 170,000 Americans. “We’re about to see a tragedy occur in the state. And there’s not a lot we can do about it. That’s frightening,” said Sara Anne Willette of Ames, a parent and former math tutor who runs a website tracking state infection data. At issue is Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds’ mandate in July that districts offer at least 50% classroom instruction.

Judge Issues Blistering Injunction Against Betsy DeVos' Coronavirus Aid Rule
Education Week By Andrew Ujifusa on August 22, 2020 10:59 AM
A federal judge has ruled against U.S. Department of Education in a lawsuit over how much coronavirus aid public schools must set aside for private school students.  Public school groups and officials argued that the interim final rule from the department unfairly deprives their schools and disadvantaged students of crucial funding during the pandemic.  In a preliminary injunction halting enforcement and implementation of the rule while she considers the case pitting Washington state against the Education Department, U.S. District Court Judge Barbara J. Rothstein harshly and repeatedly rejected the department's arguments. She said that the agency subverted the intent of Congress and hurt students most affected by the pandemic, and that Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos did not have the authority to issue the rule in the first place.  The Education Department's interim final rule, publicized in June and formally issued in July, pushes school districts to reserve money under the CARES Act, the federal coronavirus stimulus plan, for services to all local private school students, irrespective of their backgrounds. That represents a major departure from how education law typically governs that arrangement, in which federal money for what's known as "equitable services" goes to disadvantaged, at-risk private school students.   But Rothstein attacked DeVos' rule as "blind to the realities of this extraordinary pandemic and the very purpose of the CARES Act: to provide emergency relief where it is most needed."

In recordings, Trump’s sister says he ‘has no principles’
Penn Live By The Associated Press August 23, 2020 8:27 AM
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s older sister, a former federal judge, is heard sharply criticizing her brother in a series of recordings released Saturday, at one point saying of the president, “He has no principles.” Maryanne Trump Barry was secretly recorded by her niece, Mary Trump, who recently released a book denouncing the president, "Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man." Mary Trump said Saturday she made the recordings in 2018 and 2019. In one recording, Barry, 83, says she had heard a 2018 interview with her brother on Fox News in which he suggested that he would put her on the border to oversee cases of immigrant children separated from their parents. "His base, I mean my God, if you were a religious person, you want to help people. Not do this," Barry says. At another point she says: "His goddamned tweet and lying, oh my God." She adds: "I'm talking too freely, but you know. The change of stories. The lack of preparation. The lying. Holy shit." Barry can also be heard saying that she guesses that her brother has never read her opinions on immigration cases. "What has he read?" Mary Trump asks her aunt. Barry responds: "No. He doesn't read."
The recordings were first reported by The Washington Post. The Associated Press then obtained the recordings.

Blogger note: the 2 bulleted items for education are:
·         Provide School Choice to Every Child in America
·         Teach American Exceptionalism
Trump List Of 50 ‘Core Priorities’ For Second Term Includes ‘Return To Normal In 2021’
Andrew Solender Forbes Staff Updated Aug 23, 2020, 11:28pm EDT
On the eve of the Republican National Convention, the Trump campaign released a list of President Trump’s “core priorities” for a second term after the Republican National Committee opted not to adopt a new platform for 2020. The RNC passed a resolution to “enthusiastically support” Trump’s “America-first” agenda and “reject the policy positions of the Obama-Biden administration,” calling on reporters to “engage in accurate and unbiased reporting” on the decision. The Trump campaign instead released a bulleted list of 50 goals – though without fleshed-out plans to buttress them – such as “create 10 million new jobs in 10 months” and “lower prescription drug prices.”


Blogger commentary:
Parents considering cyber charters due to COVID might not be aware of their 20 year consistent track record of academic underperformance. As those parents face an expected blitz of advertising by cybers, in order for them to make a more informed decision, you might consider providing them with some of the info listed below:

A June 2 paper from the highly respected Brookings Institution stated, “We find the impact of attending a virtual charter on student achievement is uniformly and profoundly negative,” and then went on to say that “there is no evidence that virtual charter students improve in subsequent years.”

In 2016, the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, and the national charter lobbying group 50CAN released a report on cyber charters that found that overall, cyber students make no significant gains in math and less than half the gains in reading compared with their peers in traditional public schools.

Stanford University CREDO Study in 2015 found that cyber students on average lost 72 days a year in reading and 180 days a year in math compared with students in traditional public schools.

From 2005 through 2012 under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, most Pennsylvania cybers never made “adequate yearly progress.”

Following NCLB, for all five years (2013-2017) that Pennsylvania’s School Performance Profile system was in place, not one cyber charter ever achieved a passing score of 70.

Under Pennsylvania’s current accountability system, the Future Ready PA Index, all 15 cyber charters that operated 2018-2019 have been identified for some level of support and improvement.


PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference October 14-15 Virtual
Registration is now open for the first ever virtual School Leadership Conference! Join us for all-new educational sessions, dynamic speakers, exhibitors, and more! Visit the website for registration information: https://t.co/QfinpBL69u #PASLC20 https://t.co/JYeRhJLUmZ

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.

Adopt the resolution against racial inequity!
School boards are asked to adopt this resolution supporting the development of an anti-racist climate. Once adopted, share your resolution with your local community and submit a copy to PSBA. Learn more: http://ow.ly/yJWA50B2R72

Save The Date: The PSBA 2020 Equity Summit is happening virtually on October 13th.
Discover how to build a foundation for equity in practice and policy.

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.

292 PA school boards have adopted charter reform resolutions
Charter school funding reform continues to be a concern as over 290 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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