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Posts in category State PTA News

17th District Elects 2011-13 Board; State PTA Announces Slate

Feb15
2011
Written by Webmaster

At today’s Founders Day Luncheon, 17th District PTA’s members elected our Board of Directors for the 2011-13 term:

  • President: Susan Bell
  • 1st VP – Programs & Convention: VACANT
  • 2nd VP – Leadership: VACANT
  • 3rd VP – Membership & Member Services: Myra Gruschka
  • 4th VP – Communications: Ellen Fitzpatrick
  • 5th VP – Education & Health: Colette Rudd
  • 6th VP – Advocacy & Community Concerns: Keiko Smith
  • Secretary: Kathryn Cross
  • Treasurer: Bill Etling
  • Financial Secretary: Emily Sarver
  • Auditor: Napoleon Garcia
  • Historian: Elizabeth Luaulu

Also, these chairmanship appointments have been made for the 2011-13 term:

  • Legislation Coordinator: Deborah Kemper
  • Reflections Chairman: Christine Semenza
  • Founder’s Day Luncheon Chairman: Lori McBride

A special thanks to all of the dedicated volunteers whom have stepped up to serve 17th District for the next two years on our Board of Managers. The board will be installed at our “Spotlight on PTA” meeting on May 16, and will assume office on July 1.

There are still a number of open positions for the 2011-13 Board of Managers, including Vice President of Programs & Convention, Vice President of Leadership, Parliamentarian, Student Involvement Chairman, Superintendents Luncheon Chairman, Honorary Service Awards Chairman, May Event Chairman, Student Aid/Community Schools Chairman, Seventeena Editor, and Webmaster. If you are interested in filling any of these positions or offering any other volunteer experience to 17th District next term, please contact Susan Bell, President-Elect.

California State PTA’s Nominating Committee Announces Slate of Officers

We are also really excited to share the news that two of 17th District’s past presidents have been nominated to positions on the State PTA Board of Directors for next term. Past DP Kathryn Cross (2005-07) has been nominated for Vice President of Communications, and past DP Colleen You (2003-05) has been nominated to serve as State PTA President-Elect in the 2011-13 term. If elected, she would then automatically assume the office of State PTA President in 2013-15.

We want to congratulate both Kathryn and Colleen on their nominations to these positions on the State Board of Directors. Their election will take place at the State PTA Convention in Long Beach on Thursday, April 28.

The full slate from State PTA’s Nominating Committee follows:

  • President: Carol Kocivar (automatically assumes office)
  • President-Elect: Colleen You
  • Vice President for Leadership Services: Sue King
  • Vice President for Programs & Member Services: Maggie Steele
  • Vice President for Communications: Kathryn Cross
  • Vice President for Convention: Justine Fischer
  • Vice President for Community Concerns: Kathy Rabun
  • Vice President for Education: Debbie Look
  • Vice President for Parent Involvement: Brian Bonner
  • Vice President for Health: Linda Mayo
  • Vice President for Membership: Patty Christiansen
  • Secretary: Laurie Koch
  • Treasurer: Kathy Stevenson
  • Parliamentarian: Shirley Gold (appointed)
  • Director of Legislation: Patty Scripter (appointed)
Posted in 17th District News

Parcel Tax Measure Fails to Qualify for November 2010 Ballot

May27
2010
Written by Webmaster

Cross-posted from a May 27 California State PTA Legislative Alert

We would like to thank the many PTA volunteers who signed the petition to put the “Local Control of Local Classrooms Funding Act” on the statewide ballot in November 2010. We know that many of you worked very hard to collect signatures from your fellow PTA members, neighbors and family members. We truly appreciate your efforts.

Unfortunately, we were not successful in qualifying the initiative for this year’s ballot. We fell far short of the signatures needed. The bulk of the signatures came from San Mateo County, Santa Clara County, Contra Costa County and Los Angeles County.

Despite being unsuccessful in our original goal, this effort did demonstrate that there are thousands of voters in California interested in efforts to support their local schools. We will continue to advocate on this issue. Senator Joe Simitian’s SCA 6 is a bill currently in the Legislature, that would reduce the threshold for local school parcel taxes from the current two-thirds to 55 percent. PTA has a Support position on this bill and will continue to work with the Senator’s office, should the bill move forward.

Once again, we would like to express our sincere appreciation to our many members for their support and tremendous efforts on this issue. Although our advocacy efforts do not always succeed in the short term, we know that they are never wasted, as we are building a base of support for this issue in the longer term.

Posted in Legislation

California State PTA Joins Historic Lawsuit Challenging California’s Unconstitutional Education Finance System

May21
2010
Written by Webmaster

Cross-posted from the May 20th Press Release

A historic lawsuit was filed today against the State of California requesting that the current education finance system be declared unconstitutional and that the state be required to establish a school finance system that provides all students an equal opportunity to meet the academic goals set by the State.

The case, Robles-Wong, et al. v. State of California, was filed in the Superior Court of California in Alameda County. Specifically, the suit asks the court to compel the State to align its school finance system—its funding policies and mechanisms—with the educational program that the State has put in place. To do this, plaintiffs allege, the State must scrap its existing finance system; do the work to determine how much it actually costs to fund public education to meet the state’s own program requirements and the needs of California’s school children; and develop and implement a new finance system consistent with Constitutional requirements.

The lawsuit was filed by a broad coalition, including more than 60 individual students and their families, nine school districts from throughout the State, the California School Boards Association (CSBA), California State PTA, and the Association of California School Administrators (ACSA).

“Filing this lawsuit was a last resort,” said CSBA President Frank Pugh. “Education funding has been in a deteriorating spiral in California for decades. A failure to act now threatens the future of California’s students and the future of our state. The Governor and lawmakers have known for some time that the current school finance system is harming students and they’ve done nothing to remedy the crisis. The $17 billion in cuts to education have only made a dire situation even worse. California’s unstable, unsound and insufficient school finance system is robbing our students of an education.”

“This lawsuit seeks to ensure that the State, the Legislature and the Governor comply with the Constitution and fund and deliver the promised education program to all students in the state,” said Bill Abrams, a partner at the law firm of Bingham McCutchen and counsel for plaintiff students and families. “The Constitution requires that school funding ‘first be set apart’ to meet program demands, and provides that education is a fundamental right and must be made equally available to every child. Too often, this isn’t the case, and the State balances its budget on the backs of its students by cutting or underfunding education programs, and thus prevents schools from meeting its own education standards.”

California’s broken school finance system has undermined the ability of districts to educate our children by making no connection between what is expected of schools and students and the funding provided in order to meet those expectations.

California has set clear requirements for what schools are expected to teach and what students are expected to learn. But the state has failed in its obligation to provide the resources necessary to meet these requirements. The state’s failure to support the required educational program adversely affects all students. Academic achievement results show California’s irrational, unstable and insufficient school finance system denies students the opportunity to become proficient in the State’s academic standards.

“Numerous reports during the last decade have documented the state’s failure to remedy the broken school finance system. The Governor’s own Committee on Educational Excellence in 2007 concluded that our current system is not producing the results that taxpayers and citizens are counting on and that our students deserve,” said Chuck Weis, president of the Association of California School Administrators. “We are asking the courts to require the State to meet the expectations set by law in the Constitution.”

California’s unique revenue and expenditure system makes our schools almost completely dependent on the state, and yet the Governor and Legislature have failed to make education a priority.

The Constitution gives education financing a unique priority by requiring that “from all state revenues there shall first be set apart the monies to be applied by the State for support of the public school system.” Instead, school financing has been battered by instability that prohibits necessary planning to deliver what has been promised to students, and as a result all students suffer. Only half of all California students are proficient in English-language arts; and less than half (approximately 46 percent) are proficient in mathematics. In addition, fewer than 70 percent of California students graduate from high school.

“We require students to meet high education standards and then deny them the resources they need to meet those standards,” said Jo A.S. Loss, president of the California State PTA. “We must have a system that allows schools to deliver a high-quality education for all children – in good times and in tough times.”

Currently, the state ranks 47th among all states in its per-pupil spending on education, spending $2,856 less per pupil than the national average.

Yet most Californians, according to a recent poll conducted by the Public Policy Institute of California, believe there is not enough state funding going to public schools, and a majority single out K-12 education as the area that they most want to protect from spending cuts.

“Since I started going to school at Alameda High as a freshman, I know that summer programs have been cut. I know that teachers have been laid off. And I know that programs that are supposed to help my classmates and me go to college have been cut,” said Maya Robles-Wong, a 16-year-old 11th-grader and a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “I’m not an expert in education finance, but I know enough to say that it’s not because my teachers and our schools aren’t trying to give us what we need. I know that the real problem is that the State is not providing the support my school needs to teach me everything I need.”

Ignoring the facts about our state’s education finance system will deny generations of students the opportunity to be competitive and successful in our global economy. California educates the most diverse student population in the nation and yet we rank nearly last in per- pupil funding. Unless the State fixes the broken school finance system, students will be denied the opportunity to become informed citizens and productive members of society.

For more information about the school finance lawsuit, please visit www.fixschoolfinance.org.

###

Watch California State PTA President Jo Loss present at the May 20 press conference [Facebook Video]
Read all of the press statements from the San Francisco and Sacramento conferences [PDF]
View a Fact Sheet about the lawsuit
Download a Copy of the Robles-Wong v. California Complaint [PDF]

Posted in Legislation, State Budget Advocacy

State PTA Responds to Governor’s May Budget Revision

May15
2010
Written by Webmaster

California State PTA issued the following statement today in response to the Governor’s May Revision to the state budget. In the coming weeks, we will be analyzing the specific proposals and providing more information to you to assist in advocacy efforts.

SACRAMENTO – Jo A.S. Loss, president of California State PTA, issued the following statement in response to the Governor’s May Revision of the 2010-2011 budget proposal.

The Governor continues to propose cuts to education, children’s programs and critical social services that are intolerable and unconscionable. The first responsibility of our elected officials is to meet the fundamental needs of all of our children, including a quality education.

The Governor stated that a budget should be a reflection of what we value most. Yet, his proposal does not at all support what Californians care about most: our children.

The Governor also spoke about the need to create jobs and stimulate our economy. Healthy, well educated students are critical for a strong economy.

Any responsible approach to solving the current fiscal crisis requires a balanced approach, including additional revenues. These brutal cuts jeopardize the future of our children and the future of our state.

We are deeply disturbed that the Governor’s May Revision chooses to solve the state’s current fiscal crisis with massive cuts. This was not the only option. Choosing to impose these cuts on our children is unacceptable.

We call upon all Californians to speak up and demand a budget that invests in and meets the needs of California’s 9 million children.

We have seen more than $17 billion in cuts to public education in the last two years. The Governor’s May revision proposes to continue cutting education funding at the same levels as proposed in January. Class sizes are increasing, and we are already losing arts, music, gifted programs and extra-curricular activities. Our most vulnerable students are losing academic support programs and intervention services. School libraries are closing or reducing the hours they are available to students. Already among the last in the nation in the number of nurses, librarians and counselors per student, we are losing even more of these critical members of our education communities.

PTA is equally worried about the threats to the health, safety and well-being of California’s children. Eliminating CalWORKS and decimating child care and other programs as proposed in the May revision will have a devastating effect.

The people of California want a budget that reflects their values. 79 percent of California voters are opposed to making further cuts to public schools to reduce the state budget deficit. A majority of Californians believe that there is not enough state funding going to public schools, and 66 percent would be willing to pay higher taxes to maintain current funding for public schools.

Business officials agree that investing in education is critical. Top Silicon Valley business leaders note that improving K-12 education is one of the most important things the state should do to improve the business climate. Good schools are needed to recruit the best employees.

The future prosperity of our state requires a well-educated workforce able to compete in the global economy. Brutal cuts to our schools and critical services to children jeopardize California’s future.

# # #

This evening, the California Budget Project plans to post a quick overview of the May Revision on its website – www.cbp.org.
As details emerge regarding the budget, we will send more information to you. We will also post updated information on our website -www.capta.org.

Posted in Legislation, State Budget Advocacy

State PTA 2010 Legislation Conference

Oct27
2009
Written by Webmaster

Registration is now open for the 2010 State PTA Legislation Conference, which will take place on Sunday, February 21-Monday, February 22, 2010 in Sacramento. This year’s theme is “Connecting the Dots: From Issues to Advocacy.” Come learn from education policy experts and State PTA advocates about the major issues affecting children and families, what PTA’s positions are on these issues, and strategies to use when you meet with your legislators. Time will be provided on Monday afternoon for appointments with your local legislators.

The conference will take place at the Embassy Suites Hotel (near Old Sacramento). Registration costs for the conference is $135, and hotel rooms are $159 per night. The conference fee covers all conference activities and materials, and dinner on Sunday and lunch at the capitol on Monday. The hotel serves a complimentary full cooked-to-order breakfast daily and a manager’s reception in the evening. Travel and hotel costs are not included. Visit the State PTA website for more information and to register.

Posted in Events, Legislation
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The mission of the 17th District PTA is to empower local PTA/PTSA associations to support the school community by providing training, resources, education and communication to promote the value of PTA membership, programs, advocacy and networking opportunities.

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