logo
Watertown City School District to reallocate universal pre-K slots

Watertown City School District to reallocate universal pre-K slots

Yahoo4 days ago
Aug. 6—WATERTOWN — The Watertown City School District Board of Education is moving forward with a controversial universal pre-K plan as presented during the district's budget process.
The board voted on Tuesday to designate eight community-based organizations, CBOs, to be partners with the district. It is then the superintendent and the district's administrative team that will allocate the students.
The district is looking to reallocate some of its UPK slots from community-based organizations and bring them in-house into the school district. Previously, the district had contracted all of its UPK programs.
After Tuesday's meeting, Superintendent Larry C. Schmiegel said the district will be using five of the classrooms previously used for UPK for its in-house programs.
The issue, which came up when the Board of Education passed the district's budget in May, has drawn the attention of Assemblyman Scott A. Gray, R-Watertown.
In a news release, Gray said that Jefferson County is in "crisis when it comes to child care access," as 72% of the county is classified as a child care desert.
Gray argues that removing the UPK slots from the community-based organizations would reduce available care, destabilize full-day services, and make it more difficult for families to get the support they need.
"We need to build a plan that preserves community capacity, avoids future taxpayer liabilities and ensures equitable access to care," Gray said in the news release. "That starts with listening to families and providers and building trust through true community participation."
Board member Rande S. Richardson was one of two "no" votes on the resolution. He says it's about the process the district followed to get to this point.
"We have decades of amazing service from our community partners and whenever we had an opportunity to talk to them, and Lori (Converse, fellow board member) were in a room with all of them, really all they were asking us to do is include them in the process like we would with any partner," Richardson said. "I realize we're way into the process, almost too late, but I just can't get behind it. It's not who I am, it's not who we are...I'm sad that we got to this point where we are today."
Converse said that "it's been a rough couple months."
"Community is huge for me, too. This school is as well, and this was one of those situations where they didn't collide the way I would like them to," she said.
Newly elected board president John A. Cain said it comes down to physical space, which he says the district does not have because of obligations to other students, contracts and programs.
"If we had the physical space, we'd be happy to share it with all our CBOs," he said. "It's not just we are going to vote on this resolution and walk away from it. We very much intend to be partners with our community partners to try to continue to find spaces that are appropriate for our pre-K programs to use."
Anthony Doldo, a Jefferson County legislator who serves on the Community Action Planning Council board, heavily criticized the decision during the meeting on Tuesday. The council is one of the district's CBOs.
"Larry, I'm sorry, but you were not clear with this community," he said, addressing the district superintendent. "This could've been worked out a long time ago before we even got to this point. We would've scrounged and found space, if need be, but not at the last minute ... I hope that things change. They need to change because these children in this community are the ones that are going to suffer."
He said that Community Action Planning Council members were willing and tried to talk with school administrators but never heard back.
Schmiegel said any change in the request for proposals process would start it over. He says he and the district have been advocating at the state level for more funding, which UPK providers say hasn't been increased in a decade.
"We will continue researching that and advocating," he said.
Schmiegel said CBOs should also be advocating for more funding at the state level.
Cain, newly elected board vice president Culley Gosier, and members Melanie Stano and Tina Fluno voted yes while Richardson and Converse voted no. Former board president Jason Harrington abstained from the vote, saying he serves on the board of one of the CBOs.
The Board of Education passed a resolution allowing for Schmiegel to look at using building spaces involved in a capital improvement project as a "swing space" and to see if they can use the space for pre-K.
"I don't think we got this one entirely right, that's obvious," Cain said. "All we can do is take our licks from the community, which I'm sure we will, and we are, and we will try to learn our lesson and get it better next time."
Schmiegel said that if the resolution did not pass Tuesday night, it would have been tabled and UPK would not start in September for any of the CBOs.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Phillipson vows to tackle ‘thorny' challenge facing white working-class pupils
Phillipson vows to tackle ‘thorny' challenge facing white working-class pupils

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Phillipson vows to tackle ‘thorny' challenge facing white working-class pupils

The Education Secretary has pledged to tackle the 'thorny' generational challenge of British white working-class young people falling behind their peers as she called it her 'priority' for the year ahead. Bridget Phillipson has said it is a 'national disgrace' that so many young people are 'written off' and do not get what they need in the education system to achieve and thrive after leaving school. Speaking before A-level results day on Thursday, Ms Phillipson said her focus will be turning around the 'stark' attainment gap and outcomes between white working-class children and their peers. The Government will set out its plans for the challenge in a schools white paper in the autumn, she said. Fewer than a fifth (18.6%) of white British pupils eligible for free school meals achieved at least a grade 5 – which is considered a 'strong pass' – in their English and maths GCSEs in 2023/24, compared to 45.9% of all state school pupils in England, according to Department for Education (DfE) data. The Education Secretary told the PA news agency: 'They're not well positioned to carry on with studies, to get an apprenticeship, to go on to university. 'That is why the schools white paper we will be publishing in the autumn will set out an ambitious vision for how we can tackle this generational challenge of what many young people experience. '(It) is a national disgrace that so many young people are written off and don't get what they need to achieve and thrive.' She added: 'Far too many young people, particularly white working-class British students, don't get the exam results that they need at GCSE or A-level to allow them to continue onto university.' Students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their A-level results on Thursday and they will decide whether to study in higher education, do an apprenticeship or go straight into work. University sector leaders have suggested that cost-of-living pressures are affecting young people's choices around university – with more opting to stay living at home while doing their degree. Jo Saxton, chief executive of Ucas, would like the Government to provide more bursaries and maintenance support for young people amid a rise in students who are choosing to stay living at home. She said students were opting not to move away from home for their studies amid cost-of-living pressures, and some were choosing a university near home so they could keep an existing part-time job. Dr Saxton told PA there has also been a rise in UK 19-year-old first-time applicants as more young people are wanting to work and 'raise some funds' for a year before they go to university due to pressures. Ucas figures released last month revealed that the number of UK 19-year-olds who have applied to higher education by the June 30 deadline has increased by 1.4% compared to last year. Addressing the cost-of-living pressures facing students, the Education Secretary said the Government recognises that there is 'still more to do' to tackle some of the disparities that young people experience. She told PA: 'I do want all students to be able to get the full benefits of their time at university, to be able to take up internships, study trips (and) other work experience opportunities. 'I don't want students from less well-off backgrounds to be deterred from doing that because of having to take on more hours of paid work.' When asked if the Government is considering bringing back maintenance grants in England to support poorer students facing cost pressures, Ms Phillipson said: 'We're looking at all of the options in terms of how we can support students to both get to university but also to thrive while they're at university.' She added that universities have responsibilities 'to make sure students from less well-off backgrounds are given the support that they need' to get to university and to complete their studies. 'There's still a big challenge there in terms of some of the unacceptably high dropout rates that we see for some students,' the Education Secretary said. Last year, the Government announced that undergraduate tuition fees in England, which have been frozen at £9,250 since 2017, will rise to £9,535 for the 2025-26 academic year. It also announced that maintenance loans will increase in line with inflation in the 2025-26 academic year to help students with their living costs. But university leaders have called for maintenance support to be adjusted in line with inflation in future years rather than as a one-off as part of the Government's reforms which will be set out in the autumn. When asked about these calls, Ms Phillipson said: 'Both in terms of student finance and the financial sustainability of universities, I understand the arguments that universities make around certainty of funding and that's something we're considering as part of the post-16 white paper.' Speaking to PA before the start of the new academic year, the Education Secretary said: 'My big priority for this year will be how we focus on the really stark picture that we see around attainment and outcomes for children from white working-class backgrounds in places like Sunderland.' She added: 'The focus will be how we tackle some of those really thorny and generational challenges – like the gaps that we see around white working-class children and their attainment. 'That's why both the post-16 white paper and the schools white paper will have a focus on how we turn that around, and how we make sure that all children in our country can achieve and thrive.' An independent inquiry into the educational outcomes of white working-class children was commissioned by Sir Hamid Patel, chief executive of the multi-academy trust Star Academies, in June. Speaking before A-level results day, Ucas chief Dr Saxton told PA that an increase in UK 19-year-old first-time applicants was a 'new emerging trend'. She said: 'I don't think it's the gap year in the sort of traditional Sloaney sense. '(The) number one concern that we hear from students concerned about the cost of living and they want to work for a bit and raise some funds before they go to study.' Dr Saxton added: 'Would I like to see the Government provide more bursaries and maintenance support? Yes, of course I would.' The Ucas boss said 'commuter students' – those who decide not to move away for university – are using clearing to decline their place to study closer to home 'either because of caring responsibilities, or related to cost of living, or because it means they can keep a part-time job they already have'. On the rise of UK 19-year-old applicants, Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK (UUK), said: 'There's clearly an affordability concern for applicants.' She told PA: 'I'd be saying to Government this is another reason to get your skates on and address the maintenance and support issue. 'Because it might be students who are taking a bit of time out to earn a bit of money to help them as they enter university. 'But if it's because they are worried about the availability of finance through the maintenance loan – and it's the threshold not going up, as well as the total value of the maintenance loan not going up, that's been a problem – then I think Government should be paying a bit of attention to it.'

Trump's Vile Take on Teenager's Rape Goes Viral as Epstein Woes Deepen
Trump's Vile Take on Teenager's Rape Goes Viral as Epstein Woes Deepen

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's Vile Take on Teenager's Rape Goes Viral as Epstein Woes Deepen

President Donald Trump's shocking defense of a champion boxer who raped a teenage girl has resurfaced as the president faces intense scrutiny of his relationship with accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. In a 1992 clip from Late Night with David Letterman being circulated online, the future president tells the show's host that he doesn't think Mike Tyson ought to have been sentenced to six years in jail for the rape of beauty pageant contestant Desiree Washington, who was 18 years old at the time. 'It's ridiculous,' Trump says, referencing the fact the crime took place late at night after Washington had been 'dancing' for Tyson. Trump then suggested that a more fitting punishment would have been for the boxer to serve less time and pay monetary restitution to 'rape victims' in general. 'Mike Tyson should supply millions and millions and millions of dollars to rape victims, and I think that's a hell of a lot better than him sitting in a jailhouse for six years,' the future president says. 'Mike should serve some time and everything else, but to keep a man… here's a woman that was dancing at his door at one o'clock in the morning. Dancing.' A second clip from Trump's appearance the same year on The Charlie Rose Show features him questioning Washington's account of the crime itself, saying she 'was raped perhaps, perhaps not.' Both videos have resurfaced at a time the president is facing public backlash over his administration's handling of the Epstein files. The current furor kicked off after the Justice Department and FBI released a memo in July stating that Epstein's 2019 death in police custody was a suicide and that, contrary to rumors long cherished by far-right conspiracy theorists, the late pedophile kept no 'client list' of uber-wealthy co-conspirators. In February this year, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the Jeffrey Epstein client list was 'sitting on my desk right now.' Amid mounting public outcry from his base, which has accused the administration of a cover-up, Trump—who once described Epstein as a 'terrific guy' who 'likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side'—has scrabbled to placate his supporters. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump's former criminal defense attorney, sat down with Maxwell, who's serving 20 years on sex trafficking charges, for an interview in July in which Maxwell reportedly said she never saw Trump do anything inappropriate. After the interview, Maxwell was transferred to a lower-security prison camp in Bryan, Texas. The White House is reportedly weighing releasing the transcript of the interview.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store