Board may not reduce class sizes The...
Board may not reduce class sizes
The Huntington Beach City School District board of trustees will
hold a study session after the March 2 election to discuss how its
outcome will affect the district’s budget plans.
On the advice of the district’s budget committee, Supt. Gary
Rutherford had recommended to strike funding for class-size reduction
from the budget for the 2004-05 school year and rely on community
fundraising to keep the program alive.
The school board declined on Feb. 17 to approve a first reading of
the superintendent’s budget recommendations, which included
additional cuts to other district programs.
“[The board] just wanted to have the administration look at the
recommendations and see if there are any other options,” board
President Robert Mann said.
Mann said he was concerned about the proposed elimination of
class-size reduction, a sentiment echoed by board member Brian
Rechsteiner.
“I think class-size reduction is a great program ... it’s also 29
jobs,” Rechsteiner said, referring to the anticipated layoffs of 29
teachers if the program is lost for next year.
The board plans to convene for a study session on March 5 to see
whether Californians approve Proposition 57, a $15-billion bond the
governor has said is needed to fix the state’s fiscal holes.
The budget committee’s current plans, which include cutting
class-size reduction, are based on proposals the governor released in
January. The governor has said drastic cuts will be required if
voters reject the bond -- which would force the district to come up
with a new set of budget proposals.
“If that doesn’t go forward, we’re back to the old drawing board,”
Rutherford said.
Landmark court case revisited
Students at Edison High School studied a little-known case on
Monday that led to California becoming the first state to ban
segregation in public schools.
The school held an assembly on Mendez vs. Westminster, the 1947
case that challenged segregation policies primarily targeting Latinos
attending the Westminster School District and other Orange County
districts.
Visiting Edison on Monday were Sylvia Mendez, whose parents filed
the suit, and Sandra Robbie, writer and producer of the KOCE
documentary “Mendez vs. Westminster: Para Todos los Ninos/For All the
Children.”
Robbie said 90% of Californians are unfamiliar with the case,
which was resolved seven years before the landmark Brown vs. Board of
Education case.
“[The students] were amazed to learn this history,” Robbie said.
Before attending the assembly, students viewed the documentary in
class. On Monday, they were able to hear Mendez’s perspective.
“The students could ask Sylvia what her experience was like,”
Robbie said.
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