A HUGE thank you to everyone that attended the school board meeting last evening. We had a great turnout and representation from 6 of the 7 elementary schools. This movement is about being opposed to closing ANY elementary school in the district because of the impact it would have on the remaining six buildings. Dr. Miller confirmed last night that, no matter which school is closed, it will be felt across the district.
Posts Tagged ‘elementary school’
The Morning After…
Posted: October 25, 2012 in Take ActionTags: capacity, community task force, elementary school, excess capacity, Feasibility Study, Miller, North Allegheny, North Allegheny School Board, North Allegheny School District, save na schools, saveNAschools, school board, Tara Fisher, task force
NA Patch: North Allegheny School Board to Reveal Updated Data Which Could Impact Potential School Closings
Posted: October 23, 2012 in Press CoverageTags: capacity, class size, closing, elementary school, excess capacity, Feasibility Study, Hosack, Marshall, Maureen Grosheider, North Allegheny, North Allegheny School Board, North Allegheny School District, Peebles, petition, Phase 2 Feasibility Study, saveNAschools, school board
The board meets for its next public session on Oct. 24.
By Richard Cook, NA Patch
The North Allegheny School Board tomorrow is expected to release updated demographic data that could potentially impact recommendations to close one of the district’s elementary schools. The board meets Wednesday, Oct. 24 at 7:00 p.m. at its Central Administrative offices Hillvue Lane.
At a meeting with school board President Maureen Grosheider at Hosack Elementary School on Oct. 2, parents expressed concerns about the increasing class sizes at several of the elementary schools, and a consultant’s recommendation to close Peebles Elementary. “I’m not sure the board is ready to decide about closing a building,” Grosheider said. “We need more information from the administration on how we would redistribute the students. Where are the pockets of growth and non-growth. The administration has to look at this from a practical point of view, before any decisions are made.”
Diane Collery, a parent with a group Save NA Schools, said more than 1,000 signatures had been collected on a petition requesting a district-wide community task force be established to be involved in any decisions regarding potential school closings and student reapportionment.
Tara Fisher, another parent with the Save NA Schools group, said that in addition to an answer from the board about the formation of a task force, she also hoped the board would reveal the following:
- Administration work regarding the recommendation to close Peeble Elementary
- Building capacities
- Enrollment trends
- Current educational programs “Modeling” criteria for different scenarios (e.g. closing an elementary school)
- Communications
- Next steps
School Board member Linda Bishop acknowledged at the Sept. 19 school board meeting that the district is facing an $8 million deficit, and the prime culprits include state-mandated pension contributions. “Our contribution went up $2.3 million this year and will go up another $3 million next year,” she said. “By 2015, unless the state legislature does something, we will be looking at $20 million in pension contributions each year.” Bishop also said the district is limited in its ability to raise taxes because of a state limit that ties tax increases to the cost of living. “We could propose a larger increase, but that would have to go to a voter referendum,” she said. “70-75-percent of the people who live in the North Allegheny district don’t have children in school. Convincing them of the need to raise their property taxes is a difficult proposition.”
School Board Meeting 10/24/12 Please attend!
Posted: October 22, 2012 in Take ActionTags: capacity, class size, closing, elementary school, excess capacity, Feasibility Study, NA Residents for Neighborhood schools, NASD, North Allegheny, North Allegheny School Board, North Allegheny School District, Phase 2 Feasibility Study, saveNAschools, superintendent, Thomas & Williamson
There is a North Allegheny school board meeting on Wednesday, October 24th at 7pm at the Central Admin Offices that will cover information relevant to all elementary school parents. At this meeting, the district’s administration will provide an update on the Phase II Demographics and Feasibility Study and document their work
1) Building capacities,
2) Enrollment trends, and the
3) Current educational program.
The administration will also share their “modeling” criteria for different scenarios (e.g. closing an elementary school), communication, and next steps.
Elementary school parents are encouraged to attend so that they can hear first-hand the details of all proposals being considered by the administration and the school board.
NA Patch: North Allegheny School Board President says District is Facing the ‘Perfect Storm’
Posted: October 4, 2012 in Press CoverageTags: capacity, class size, closing, elementary school, excess capacity, Feasibility Study, Hosack, Ingomar, Linda Bishop, Maureen Grosheider, North Allegheny School Board, North Allegheny School District, Peebles, school board
School Board President Maureen Grosheider told parents at an Hosack Elementary PFA meeting that “very difficult” decisions will have to be made this year.
The Budget
North Allegheny school board President Maureen Grosheider told a group of approximately 50 parents Tuesday night at the Hosack Elementary PFA meeting that the district was facing the “perfect storm” in trying to come up with a balanced budget for next year.
“What we have is a situation where we have fewer and fewer dollars to use for classroom instruction,” she said. “And whatever increased money we get from the state is going for mandated pension contributions and transportation. Add to that, we are also paying the full load for cyber and charter schools. This year, that cost to the North Allegheny School district is $1.4 million dollars.”
Board members Linda Bishop and Beth Ludwig also attended the meeting.
Bishop acknowledged at the Sept. 19 school board meeting that the district is facing an $8 million deficit, and one of the prime culprits is the state mandated pension contributions.
“Our contribution went up $2.3 million this year, and will go up another $3 million next year,” she said. “By 2015, unless the state legislature does something, we will be looking at $20 million in pension contributions each year.”
Bishop also said the district is limited in its ability to raise taxes because of a state limit that ties tax increases to the cost of living.
“We could propose a larger increase, but that would have to go to a voter referendum,” she said. “70-75-percent of the people who live in the North Allegheny district don’t have children in school. Convincing them of the need to raise their property taxes is a difficult proposition.”
Closing Peebles Elementary
Parents in the audience Tuesday night expressed concerns about the increasing class sizes at several of the elementary schools, and a consultant’s recommendation to close Peebles Elementary.
“I’m not sure the board is ready to decide about closing a building,” Grosheider said. “We need more information from the administration on how we would redistribute the students. Where are the pockets of growth and non-growth. The administration has to look at this from a practical point of view, before any decisions are made.”
Laurel Schreiber, a parent, said a lot of parents are upset because there is not a lot of equity among the elementary schools when it comes to class sizes.
“Ingomar and Hosack have the largest class sizes,” she said.
Grosheider said the district worked hard to keep the K-2 classes smaller, but was more flexible with grades 3-5.
Ludwig said in the past, the board would have simply hired another teacher to reduce the number of students per class.
“We are not in the economic times where we can just add a teacher,” she said. “We are not hiring, we are not replacing teachers who retire, the money is simply not there.”
Parent’s Reaction
After the meeting Schreiber said she was grateful the board appeared to be listening to her, and other parents’, concerns.
“I hope that the school board will continue to evaluate whether the projected capacity they are forecasting is a realistic capacity– and that they will continue to explore the ramifications of closing an elementary building,” she said. “Many of us are far from convinced that closing a building will result in smaller classroom sizes across the district.”
Before the board can vote to close a school, it must hold at least one public hearing, advertised at least 15 days in advance. The board cannot vote for at least three months after the hearing.
Board President Maureen Grosheider said the board will have new demographic data at its next meeting that could potentially impact recommendations about any potential school closings. That meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 24.
NA Patch: North Allegheny Parents Express Frustration over Class Sizes, Fear about Possible School Closings
Posted: October 1, 2012 in Press CoverageTags: capacity, class size, closing, elementary school, Feasibility Study, Hosack, NASD, North Allegheny, North Allegheny School Board, North Allegheny School District, Peebles, petition, Phase 2 Feasibility Study, task force
Parents demand formation of a community task force to tackle both issues
By Richard Cook, NA Patch
September 26, 2012
For the second time this month, the North Allegheny School board got an earful from elementary school parents who say they are frustrated by increasing class sizes and fearful the board will close at least one elementary school.
At the most recent meeting Sept. 19, more than a half-dozen parents waited nearly two hours to address the board at the end of its regular agenda.
“My daughter goes to Hosack Elementary. Her class has 32 students,” Bill Lungren told the board.
“I had a chance to visit her classroom the other week, and I noticed there was hardly any room to move around,” Lungren said. “The desks were practically stacked on top of each other. Were these rooms designed by the original architect to handle this many students?”
School board member Linda Bishop said the district has increased class sizes to help balance its current budget.
“We’re now at the point where some very difficult decisions are going to have to be made, and one of those already this year was to float some of the class sizes,” Bishop said. “We didn’t furlough any teachers. We simply didn’t replace some teachers who retired.”
Kevin Mahler, who said he was speaking on behalf of a group of concerned parents, said he believes class size will inevitably impact the quality of education for the children of North Allegheny.
“As the cliché says, perception is reality, and there is an overwhelming perception that people like smaller class sizes, especially parents when they are choosing a school district,” he said.
Mahler said he wants the district to clearly define a policy and set limits for class sizes, particularly in the elementary schools.
“North Hills has a clear maximum (class size) of 23 students in K-2 and 25 students in grades 3-5. We often get compared in my neighborhood because you can live across the street from each other and be in either North Allegheny or North Hills (districts). That’s not a selling point anymore.”
Amanda Hartle, communications coordinator for the North Hills School Districtclarified that in grades K-1, that district’s maximum class size is 20 students per class with a single teacher, or 23 students with a teacher and a teaching assistant. In grades 2-3, the maximum is 23 students per class with a single teacher, and 25 students with a teacher and teaching assistant.
In grades 4-6 at North Hills, the maximum is 25 students per class with a single teacher, or 27 with a teacher and a teaching assistant.
Many North Allegheny parents also expressed the desire for the board to form a community task force to discuss solutions to larger classes as well as the recommendation last month from consulting firm Thomas & Williamson that Peebles Elementary be closed to equalize elementary enrollment.
“Let’s work to find lasting solutions and not Band-Aids to our budgetary problems,” said Chris Disque, a North Allegheny parent.
Before the board can vote to close a school, it must hold at least one public hearing, advertised at least 15 days in advance. The board cannot vote for at least three months after the hearing.
Board President Maureen Grosheider said the board will have new demographic data at its next meeting that could potentially impact recommendations about any potential school closings. That meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 24.
Our Response to the Proposal to Close Peebles Elementary
Posted: October 1, 2012 in Community InformationTags: capacity, class size, closing, elementary school, excess capacity, Feasibility Study, NA Residents for Neighborhood schools, NASD, North Allegheny School District, Peebles, Phase 2 Feasibility Study, saveNAschools, school board
We do not believe that closing an elementary school is the solution to the district’s budgeting problems. We believe more time and resources are needed to explore all viable long-term solutions. We have petitioned for a community task force that would involve the entire district in helping brainstorm proposals that will keep North Allegheny the school district of choice based on its excellence in education.
Please help support us in this endeavor by signing the petition for a community task force, attending monthly school board meetings to stay informed, and getting your friends and neighbors to join our Facebook page.
It can happen in North Allegheny, too.
Posted: September 24, 2012 in Other DistrictsTags: capacity, class size, closing, elementary school
To see the video, click the link below.
BROOKFIELD – A “class-size controversy” at one school district – just months after a school was closed.
Hillside Elementary was closed because of budgets and shrinking attendance.
But now parents are frustrated because of over-crowded classrooms “We have voiced our concern on that and hoping that they’d add another teacher,” said parent Jackie Smith.
Jackie Smith’s concerned about her daughter’s fifth grade class.
It’s one of four at Swanson Elementary pushed to it’s maximum size.
“I certainly don’t like that there are 30 kids in the class.”
The school added nearly 60 students in the past two and a half months forcing the district to add “sections”.
Tonawanda Elementary is in similar shape.
“So we’re going to look at whether those are permanent students or if it’s a one year kind of anomaly,” said Keith Brightman, assistant superintendent of finance, budget and human resources at Elmbrook’s School District.
The hike in enrollment comes on the heels of Hillside Elementary’s closure this spring.
District leaders consolidated for budget reasons.
Brightman said the closing of Hillside did not directly impact Swanson and Tonawanda’s class sizes.
Parent’s aren’t so sure.
Brookfield Elementary absorbed students from Hillside. But redistricting sent some Brookfield students to Swanson.
Jackie Smith understood Hillside’s closing. But she fears the district failed to address the impact it would have on other classrooms. “We’re adding 50, 60, 100 kids to your school, but we’re not hiring any more teachers,” she said.
The district budgeted for six “place holder” teaching positions for possible changes in enrollment. It ended up having to add more but did so at the younger class levels which are priority for smaller class sizes.
In fifth grade classes it will add an assistant after exploring the options, said Brightman.
“Usually those are qualified teachers in those positions in our district so that’s a very viable solution given that they’re just above our max thresholds.”
Not all parents find that an acceptable solution.
They’ll get to voice their concerns at a school board meeting next Tuesday night.