Countdown to April 29 to PERMANENTLY close M. R. Reiter. Ask the board to see the 6 point plan.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Palisades Strike Averted

From the Intelligencer.

Gotta love the comments section...


Teachers, board reach tentative deal

By AMANDA CREGAN, The Intelligencer

Palisades parents can breathe a sigh of relief.

The school district announced Wednesday that a tentative agreement has been reached between the teachers union and school board following negotiations Tuesday night.

Details of the new contract won't be released until both sides finalize the deal.

“Our ratification process usually takes about two weeks, and we will not discuss terms of the agreement until the process has been completed,” said Palisades teachers union Co-President Laurie Borger.

Parents and school administrators were bracing for a strike this week if teachers union representatives did not see contract talks significantly progress.

Last week, the 160-member teachers union authorized its leadership to call a strike, and Pennsylvania State Education Association representative Gary Smith said he was preparing for the worst.

“I think it's very likely,” Smith said late last week. “The board is just simply not being forthright with the association and the sides are very far apart. I can't see the board moving to anywhere near middle ground for a settlement.”

Teachers union and school board members would not discuss any details of the unexpected agreement.

In their old contract, salaries ranged from $40,000 to $93,505.

Teachers pay 11 percent of their health insurance premium and are responsible for prescription drug co-pays.

The benefits package also includes life insurance, liability insurance, short-term disability and long-term disability protection.

In the $36 million district budget for 2008-09, salary and benefits total nearly $24 million.

That contract expired June 30; talks began in January.

This fall, Palisades teachers have been working to rule, which means their workday ends at school dismissal and they do not participate in extra school activities.

It was also the first time the district has ever seen a strike authorization by teachers.

PSEA representative Smith could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

School board members declined to publicly mention the tentative agreement at their scheduled board meeting Wednesday night.

College Affordability Hearings

From marketwatch.com

PA State Board of Education to Host Hearings on College Affordability
Last update: 11:35 a.m. EDT Oct. 16, 2008

HARRISBURG, Pa., Oct 16, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- 5 Hearings Offer Opportunity for Students, Parents, Others
With Pennsylvania college students graduating with an average of almost $23,000 in student loan debt, the affordability of post-secondary education will be the focus of a series of hearings announced today by the State Board of Education.

The issue of college affordability continues to be a serious and growing concern of the State Board's Council of Higher Education. It was the first issue addressed in the Master Plan for Higher Education approved by the Board of Education in 2005.
As the costs of attending college continue to escalate - combined with relatively flat federal, state and institutional financial aid and increasingly restricted public and private loan markets - the Council of Higher Education hopes to gain the public's insight into how these factors are impacting the ability of those wishing to attend college.

The board is looking for testimony from college students, recent graduates, parents, higher education officials and others on how financial factors are impacting the accessibility to a postsecondary education and how students might be able to attend college without taking on worrisome debt burdens that must be repaid after graduation.

Among the issues the hearings will explore:

-- Do students feel overly burdened by the amount of money they must borrow
to cover educational costs?
-- Do concerns about student loan debt impact the choice of college major
or career choice?
-- How widespread is the practice of students and their families borrowing
funds from private sources such as home equity loans, credit cards,
etc., to pay for college?

The hearings are scheduled for the following dates and locations:

-- Oct. 23 - Luzerne County Community College Conference Center, Room 131,
1333 South Prospect St., Nanticoke.
-- Oct. 24 - Community College of Philadelphia Center for Business &
Industry, C2.5 - Lecture Room, 1700 Spring Garden St., Philadelphia.
-- Oct. 28 - Harrisburg Area Community College, Cooper Student Union, Room
204, One HAAC Dr., Harrisburg.
-- Oct. 29 - Community College of Allegheny County, Dining Room, Boyce
Campus, 595 Beatty Road, Monroeville.
-- Nov. 3 - Clarion University, Gemmell Student Center, Room 250, 840 Wood
St., Clarion.

Each hearing will begin at 10 a.m. and will continue until all testimony is received.
Individuals wishing to testify must register at least 24 hours in advance and will be assigned a 10-minute time slot. Those registered to present testimony must provide 25 copies of their written comments at the time testimony is presented, and they are requested to arrive approximately 30 minutes prior to their scheduled time slot to avoid delays in the hearing.

Persons interested in presenting testimony must contact the State Board of Education office at (7l7) 787-3787 (TTY 717-783-8445) or e-mail babaker@state.pa.us, Monday through Friday, between 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Individuals unable to attend the hearing are encouraged to submit written comments directly to the State Board of Education on or before 4 p.m., Nov. 5. Copies of testimony will be provided to each member of the State Board of Education. Comments should be sent to:

Council of Higher Education
State Board of Education
333 Market Street
Harrisburg, PA 17126-0333.

CONTACT:
Jim Buckheit
(717) 787-3787
SOURCE Pennsylvania State Board of Education