INSIDE THE SCHOOL DISTRICT Here are some...
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INSIDE THE SCHOOL DISTRICT
Here are some decisions and discussions from Tuesday night’s
Newport-Mesa Unified School District meeting:
REVIEW OF GOVERNOR’S BUDGET PROPOSAL
Assistant Supt. of Finance Paul Reed presented the board with his
outlook on how Gov. Schwarzenegger’s budget proposal will affect
statewide education, specifically in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
district.
Reed said most school districts will suffer because the governor
reneged on a deal that limited the 2004-2005 suspension of Prop 98
that would ultimately put $2.3 billion back into the school system.
The governor intends to modify Prop 98 to eliminate the ability to
suspend it and expects to repay schools over a 15-year span, as the
budget gap widens, he said.
“After years of cuts and broken promises like we’re seeing now,
the governor’s budget is not a good budget for California education,”
Reed said. “And it’s coming at a time when California is spending
less per student than most states.”
WHAT IT MEANS
The budget will be revised in May, and Reed said there are so many
complaints against it that it’s unlikely it’ll be passed as it
currently stands.
“It doesn’t solve the overall problem,” Reed said. “It solves
problems for this year but the same problems will come back again
next year ... I would be shocked beyond belief if we ever see it in
June.”
The Newport-Mesa district is more financially solvent than its
statewide counterparts, though, and should survive the budget crunch
without making many cuts, he said.
AUTHORS FESTIVAL BOOKMARK WINNERS
Three Newport-Mesa students were recognized as winners of the
districtwide Authors Festival 2005 bookmark contest. Trustees
determined that Erin Hatch, a first-grader at Andersen Elementary;
Adelaide Alva, a third-grader at Lincoln Elementary; and Idalma Cruz,
a sixth-grader at Davis Elementary, submitted the most outstanding
bookmarks.
Principals presented their students to the board and informed
trustees which books they’re currently reading.
“[Adelaide] loves to read,” said Lincoln Principal Jane Holm. “She
also likes humorous books. I asked her how it felt, and she said,
‘Great, just great.’ ”
WHAT IT MEANS
Board president Serene Stokes handed each winner a certificate of
recognition and posed for pictures with the students and their
families. The three finalists’ bookmarks will be distributed
districtwide to students in kindergarten through sixth grade.
The seventh annual festival will be held Feb. 3, as 34 children’s
book authors will speak to students at district schools.
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