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Hermosa schools: McCurdy named to board, swine flu cases reported

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Two cases of H1N1, the virus formally known as swine flu that made international headlines in April when it first surfaced in rural Mexico, have been verified in the Hermosa City School District, Superintendent Bruce Newlin said at a board meeting Wednesday.
 
School officials from each of the district's schools, Valley and View, have reported a case.
 
"We're not anywhere close to closing schools," Newlin said. "We are aware of what's going on and watching it very closely. This is flu season, and every case of flu is not going to be swine flu. But we're watching (these cases) very carefully so we can take steps that when cases do show up we can verify them and then make recommendations to families in the community. "
 
H1N1, which caused a stir for its ability to strike the young and apparently healthy, has been reported in 34 schools and linked to 57 deaths in Los Angeles County.
 
On Tuesday, county health officials told the Daily News that some senior citizens may be immune to the virus if they had been exposed to similar strains before.
 
Hermosa school board President Linda Beck and member Greg Breen said they would like to see flyers sent home to parents notifying them of the cases, just as a precaution.
 
"If you've got kids that have been diagnosed, then everybody knows about it," Breen said. "It seems to me that communicating accurate facts is better than the rumor mill communicating inaccurate facts."
 
According to county recommendations, letters to parents typically don't go out unless there is a cluster of five cases in one class, said district business manager Angela Jones.
 
"What we don't want to do is start a panic," Newlin said. "We are trying to keep a balance between keeping people informed and not creating a stampede."
 
Enrollment up
 
Enrollment in the district has reached 1,244 students, up 6.1 percent from the previous year.
 
"You get the picture, by looking at those numbers, that we can reach 1,500 to 1,600 students in the near future, which raises all kinds of other questions regarding capacity issues," Newlin said.
 
There are 175 students in the first grade - up from 156 the previous year. The growth equates to 19 students, or a full class.
 
"Enrollment has continued to grow, and that has been helpful in offsetting (budget) cuts," Jones said.

McCurdy appointed to board

After a discussion that lasted 20 minutes, board members unanimously appointed Cathy McCurdy to fill the seat Barbara Zondiros vacated after the sudden illness of her husband. McCurdy is a former board member, and was first elected in 1991. She vacated her seat in 2007.

" The institutional memory that Cathy brings is quite valuable," Beck said. "I feel there is a need for contintuity, and that is why I support Cathy at the present time."

In November, the seats currently occupied by Beck, Breen and Lance Widman will be up for election.

The board interviewed six candidates to fill the vacant seat.
 

Hermosa beach supe search continues

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The Hermosa Beach City School District board of trustees will meet Monday in a closed-door meeting to discuss the best applicants for the open superintendent position. The meeting begins at 7 p.m. at 1645 Valley Dr. in Hermosa Beach. Information: 310-937-5877.

Feds approve safer seats for school buses

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Federal officials announced today that smaller school buses will be required to have harness-style seat belts and larger buses will phase in taller and safer seatbacks.

The Associated Press reports the seat belt mandate begins in 2011 and is directed to buses weighing 5 tons or less.

Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said she stopped short of requiring seat belts for larger buses because that could limit the number of children that can squeeze into seats, forcing some children to travel in ways that aren't as safe as school buses.

School districts sometimes expect as many as three younger children to share a bus seat, but if there are only two belts installed per seat then fewer children can ride the bus.

"We wanted to make sure that any measures we put forth don't needlessly limit the capacity of the buses and then force that school or that school district to have more children walking, riding with parents, biking, etcetera," Peters told The Associated Press in an interview.

The AP also reports the height of seatbacks on buses will move up to 24 inches from 20 inches which keep taller, heavier children from being thrown over seats in a crash. The rule will likely be phased in the fall of 2009 and become fully effective in 2011.

Study says cyber bullying more common

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A UCLA study reports nearly three in four teenagers say they were bullied online within a year but only 10 percent of them reported it to parents or other adults.

Reachers said the most prevalent forms of bullying online include name-calling, password thefts, threats, sending embarrassing pictures, sharing private information without permission and spreading nasty rumors.

According to UCLA:

Of those who were bullied online, 85 percent also have been bullied at school, the psychologists found. The probability of getting bullied online was substantially higher for those who have been the victims of school bullying.
The study used a survey of 1,454 between the ages of 12 and 17, who were recruited through a popular teen website. Nearly half the teens said they didn't tell anyone about the online bullying because they believed they "need to learn to deal with it" and 31 percent didn't for fear that doing so would restrict their Internet access.

Can loans help pay for California schools?

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They're baaack. Well, not exactly. Lawmakers might consider a plan to call everyone back to Sacramento to discuss the state's need for a short term $7 billion loan, according to the Sacramento Bee.

Because of the credit crunch and less state revenues Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could declare a special session where legislators may look at different ways to make up the budget hole, including cuts to schools.

Scott Plotkin, executive director of the California School Boards Association, said lawmakers "might as well stay home" if they are planning to make up the latest shortfall with cuts alone. His group and other school organizations believe the state should use tax increases to balance the budget.

"If they come back into a special session because revenue projections are in decline for the current year budget, it probably could only mean bad news for schools unless they're inclined to have a conversation about new revenues," Plotkin said.

Will teachers get paid in time?

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Maybe, according to the Sacramento Bee.

State Treasurer Bill Lockyer warned this week that Congress needs to put the nation's finances in order so the state can pay its bills in November for critical needs like teacher salaries.

Lockyer said the fiscal crisis may drain California's reserves by the end of October because the state can't sell bonds and short-term securities for cash flow needs.

"The credit market is frozen because financial institutions are afraid to commit capital amid enormous uncertainty," the treasurer said in a written statement.

"More urgently, because the state budget was so late, we have only four short weeks to complete what otherwise would be a routine revenue anticipation note sale to meet the state's cash-flow needs," Lockyer said.

Exhausting California's cash reserves would have dire consequences, he said.

"Payments for teachers' salaries, nursing homes, law enforcement and every other state-funded service would stop or be significantly delayed," Lockyer said.

"And California's 5,000 cities, counties, school districts and special districts would face the same fate."


Presidential candidates mum on No Child Left Behind

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Education Week reports rising federal academic standards is a growing concern among the nation's educators and state policy makers but not in the presidential campaign.

Democratic Sen. Barack Obama and Republican Sen. John McCain have rarely touched the subject of No Child Left Behind.

According to Ed Week:

In their education proposals, Democratic Sen. Barack Obama and Republican Sen. John McCain have outlined specific plans to address provisions of the almost 7-year-old federal education law. Both would refocus the teacher-quality section to bolster the recruitment of new teachers and to experiment with new forms of teacher pay. Sen. McCain promises to make school choice and tutoring available to students in struggling schools sooner than the current law allows.

But neither candidate has said what he would do to address significant questions about the NCLB law's future, such as whether to keep its goal of universal student proficiency in reading and mathematics by the end of the 2013-14 school year, how to increase the rigor of states' academic standards, and how to improve the interventions in schools failing to meet achievement goals.

Nominate your school to be featured in the Breeze

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A lot of people out there have called me about the glut of negative news about education and said they want to read something nice for a change. That's a good idea. So I am considering writing a story each week that takes me and a photographer into the K-12 classroom, where the actual business of learning happens.

I want the community of parents, teachers, principals, district types and students to email me at vu.nguyen@dailybreeze.com and tell me why I should visit your school and write about it. I'll probably focus on one subject so if there is an amazing math teacher or an interesting science instructor out there, let me know what they're doing right.

P.S. Make sure the principal of your school or district official gives us the okay.


Most California elementary schools will fail federal standards

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A UC Riverside study concludes the majority elementary schools in the state won't meet No Child Left Behind standards by 2014, when all students are required to show proficiency in math and English.

The study reports about half of the state's elementary schools will fail to meet federal academic guidelines by 2011.

According to the Riverside Press-Enterprise:

The English proficiency standard is likely to trip up more schools than math, according to the study. Low-income students and English language learners are the two groups of students least likely to meet the proficiency standards.

And

Schools and districts in California had to have about one-fourth of students proficient in 2007. This year, the standard is 32 percent or higher, depending on the school and type of test. The required proficiency level will go up by about 10 percentage points each year from now until 2014, unless the law is changed.

Should we lower the drinking age to 18?

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Researchers and safety experts in Maryland don't seem to think so. They said lowering the drinking age to 18 will cause more car accidents and deaths.

The experts told state legislators to keep the drinking age 21 and that they should consider tougher penalties for teens who break the law.

According to the Washington Post:

"The risk of a fatal crash increases with the first drink, especially for drivers aged 16 to 20," said James Fell, a senior program director at Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation.

The announcement is a response to college leaders' calls for a discussion on lowering the drinking age to 18 because it could promote moderation.

The Arizona Republic:

The reasoning behind the proposal, known as the Amethyst Initiative, is that the higher drinking age actually encourages binge drinking, a major problem on many college campuses. Nearly 100 college presidents from schools ranging from Duke University to Ohio State (but not Arizona or Arizona State) are in favor of the idea.

What do you think? Is lowering the drinking age to 18 a good or bad idea. I'd like to hear from teens on this idea.

Look for another education budget battle next year

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If you liked this year's record-long budget impasse, you'll love the one that's expected to happen nine months from now.

As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger likely signs a spending bill for this year's budget, the San Francisco Chronicle reports officials warn "a crisis of equal magnitude looms next year because of the weakened economy, uncertainties about the use of future lottery revenue and political gridlock among state legislators."

Until then, schools can finally exhale for now and collect $58.1 billion in state dollars that have been held up for nearly three months. The amount is an uptick from last year's $56 billion but it amounts to a 0.7 cost-of-living increase --- a drop in the bucket of the 5.66 percent increase school districts hoped to get, or about $3 billion less than educators would like to see, according to Jennifer Kuhn, analyst at the state Legislative Analyst's Office.

Education leaders last week slammed the plan, saying it doesn't help local school districts pay for the rising costs.

State Superintendent of Instruction Jack O'Connell called the plan a "gimmick," while California Teachers Association President David Sanchez and California PTA President Pam Brady each urged Schwarzenegger to use his veto power to leverage a more education-friendly budget.

"The proposed budget includes a reduction of the cost-of-living adjustment that will further tighten the vise on local school budgets as districts across the state face increased costs for supplies, food, transportation and employee health care costs," O'Connell said in a statement. "These reductions are a disservice to California's 6 million school children and the thousands of educators across the state."

The San Francisco Chronicle has a pretty good breakdown of what the budget means to the average person.

WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU: The new money doesn't cover inflation - yet the cost of salaries, benefits, books and more is rising. Students and teachers will feel the impact as teaching positions remain vacant, class size grows and even bus routes are cut back. Yet many programs - from special education to gifted education - were spared.

Stay tuned to see if lawmakers can magically fix the way public schools are funded by the summer.

Parents urged to call on legislators for a new budget plan

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The California State PTA wants parents to lobby lawmakers for a new budget deal that brings a more stable revenue stream to education. The legislature argues there is enough money for schools in the proposal --- at about $58.1 billion, up from $56.7 billion last year.

But the group backs Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger plan to veto the current budget saying it only puts a short-term bandage on school finances. The proposed budget has about $9.3 billion coming through early tax collections.

According to the San Diego Union Tribune:

Critics complained that the tax speedups are gimmicks that "borrow from taxpayers" and push a chronic deficit into next year. Schwarzenegger called them "tax increases" with a "smoke screen" when he made his initial veto threat Tuesday.

Schwarzenegger and legislators don't seem to be backing down at this point. So is backing the Governor's impending budget veto a good idea as school programs continue to run without state dollars for nearly three months?

Will the Governor's budget veto help education funding?

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One reason behind Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's likely veto of the legislative-approved budget is because of what it would mean to state education dollars.

According to the L.A. Times:

SCHWARZENEGGER: "The way this budget is right now we will need a huge tax increase next year or will have to cut education severely. It's one or the other. That's why I say we should fix the budget this year and realize there's a structural problem, create the extra revenues and then fix the system once and for all so that we have a system in place so that it doesn't happen again. That is the most important thing."

But the State Assembly and the Senate contend deep cuts to education are avoided under the plan, giving schools $58.1 billion, up from last year's $56.7 billion.

The gridlock has nearly reached the historic 80-day mark, forcing nervous school district administrators to dip into their reserves. But California schools superintendent Jack O'Connell agrees the governor should hold off until the budget addresses the state's cash problems.

"The lack of a state budget is causing real pain to businesses, schools, child care providers, and many others. We cannot allow this pain to continue. However, signing a bad budget that shortchanges schools, exacerbates California's fiscal problems, and puts off the day of reckoning would be worse than extending the short-term pain while taking the time now to do the job right.

So what's the right thing to do? Should lawmakers continue the budget standoff until schools are funded correctly or pay for mandated services like special education now?

Hermosa wants to know what you want

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Hermosa Beach City School District is hosting a community meeting Thursday to get some thoughts on who to hire as principal and vice principal at Hermosa Valley School, Andrea Woodhouse reports over at our new blog, South Bay Pipeline.

McClain moves south

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Sharon McClain, the superintendent of Hermosa Beach City School District, accepted an offer for the top job last night from Del Mar Union School District, a larger K-6 district in San Diego County.

She leaves the K-8 South Bay district after a five-year tenure. McClain said she was recruited for the Del Mar Union job by education head-hunters The Cosca Group, which called her last month.

In a conversation yesterday, McClain made clear that her husband, Joe Condon, will remain as head of Lawndale School District, where he's been since 1992.

"He's not going to leave. He'll probably retire from there," she said.

The couple have family in the San Diego and Orange County areas, and had been talking about moving down there in the future. Until Condon retires, McClain said she'd rent an apartment in the Del Mar area during the week, and the couple will retain their Long Beach home.

McClain said she'd meet shortly with the Hermosa Beach school board to talk about a transition period.

Budget-Saving Pleas Expected in Hermosa

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Also in the "How are we going to come up with as much cash as we need?" category: I'm told that when the Hermosa Beach City Council tomorrow night takes up the issue of the city's budget, a slew of parents and teachers from both View and Valley schools (the two campuses that comprise the tiny Hermosa Beach City School District) will appear to ask the municipality for money.

Sort of.

They're not going in to make demands, per se, but only to ask for council's assistance in managing the budget crisis that has almost every district in the state begging for financial mercy of some form.

The Hermosa district, of course, just like the earlier-mentioned Centinela Valley, was hoping to pass a parcel tax to help fund programs that may otherwise face extermination. Their measure scored only some 46 percent approval with voters (it needed 66 percent to win).

The Hermosa Beach City Council meets at 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Hermosa Campus Burgled

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I'm on an email list for Hermosa Beach schools that sends out periodic updates from the two-school system. I received the latest such note just now and it informs that View School was broken into on Tuesday night and relieved of a laptop computer and flat-screen monitor from the campus library.

The district is asking anyone with information -- or anyone who sees suspicious goings on around Hermosa schools -- to call the police department asap. Hermosa PD is at (310) 318-0234.

Trash Your Electronics, Help A School

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There's an e-waste collection event tomorrow in Hermosa Beach, which will benefit the city's schools.

Run by 1-800-GOT-JUNK?, any electronics you want to trash will be accepted -- from your old computers and TV sets to cell phones, printers and more.

The group will collect the goods from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., or until it fills two trucks with said e-waste, on Saturday. You can find them in the parking lot at Valley School, 1645 Valley Drive in Hermosa.

Half of the net proceeds will be donated to the Hermosa Beach Education Foundation, which helps fund programs of the local district.

Just don't toss out your Commodore 64s. Those are collector's items now, people!

Local Homeschoolers Sound Off

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The Los Angeles Times today goes deeper into the current state of homeschooling in California, which is back in the spotlight since a recent legal ruling (since vacated, pending a re-hearing in the next few months) that only credential-bearing parents can teach their kids at home.

Seema Mehta features two South Bay families in her story -- the Torrance-based Brownings and the Curtos, whose kids who attend classes at Hermosa's Hope Chapel in addition to learn at home with mom Kym.

It's a good read, with a nice accompanying photo gallery online.

District-by-district budget cut breakdowns

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As reported by Shelly Leachman in Saturday's Breeze, here's what each district would face under education funding cuts proposed by Gov. Schwarzenegger:

Centinela Valley Union High

Cuts: $3.5 million from a $68 million budget

El Segundo Unified
Cuts: $1.4 million from a 26.4 million budget

Hawthorne Unified
Cuts: $3.4 million from a $48.5 million budget

Hermosa Beach City Unified
Cuts: $0.4 million from a $9.4 million budget
Proposals: 28 teacher layoffs, increased class size

Lawndale Unified
Cuts: $2 million from a $30 million budget

Lennox Unified
Cuts: $1.9 million from a $61 million budget

Los Angeles Unified
Cuts: $460 million from a $8 billion budget

Manhattan Beach Unified
Cuts: $0.9 million from a $36 million budget
Proposals: 5-7 teacher layoffs, fund transfers, combining course sections at Mira Costa, using reserves

Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified
Cuts: $4 million from a $95 million budget
Proposals: 50 layoffs, increased class sizes, eliminating extended-day kindergarten

Redondo Beach Unified
Cuts: $2.2 million from a $67.5 million budget
Proposals: Increased class sizes, early retirement incentives, combining classified positions, introducing fee-based transportation for athletic teams, reducing substitutes, using one-time monies

Torrance Unified
Cuts: $9.4 million from a $196 million budget
Proposals: 70 full-time teachers, 11 custodians, 5.5 full-time special ed teachers, reduction of security at high schools, elimination of incentives including the School Safety Violence Program and the P.E. Incentive Program, early retirement incentives, reduction of travel/conference allowances

Wiseburn Unified
Cuts: $0.5 million from a $17 million budget

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