Collierville School Board working session – Feb 25, 2014 – Citizen’s report

Since the local media do a generally abysmal job at reporting relevant news on the municipal school efforts, I will start trying to provide my summary of school board meetings here. Meeting reports will be based on observation of the meeting, and my personal notes. Where I venture into opinion, it should generally be clear.

The Collierville Municipal School Board meets every other week. The meetings alternate between working sessions, where the board receives and provides updates, and board meetings, where items can be approved, as well as discussed. At the board meetings, the public can speak during the comment session at the start of the meeting. Today’s working session had (as per usual so far) all 5 board members present.

The main purpose of the meeting was to perform a first reading of 26 board policies, primarily focused on financial processes, and then 10 policies mostly around attendance, transfers, and the calendar for the 2014-15 school year. The board moved to call a special meeting to vote on the latter 10 policies a week from today (March 4), so as to pick up some momentum around these key policies that will shape a lot of activity for the school administration.

The main item of note from the first 26 to me was the establishment of a single payroll calendar for all employees of the school district, which will see everyone paid on the first and fifteenth, rather than the biweekly payroll that SCS uses today. From a payroll administration perspective, a single, semimonthly payroll is easier to process than a mix of pay frequencies.

In the other 10 you will find some of the key items people have been waiting for:

- The CMSD calendar will look very much like the current SCS calendar. It should be noted that there is a state requirement to have completed at least 120 instructional days before spring testing, and then when you factor in Spring Break, Christmas Break, Fall Break and a few shorter breaks and holidays… there is not much flexibility left in when school starts. The proposed calendar has student registration on July 29, and school starting on Monday August 4. There is an expectation that in subsequent years, there will be more tweaking, and parental input through surveys.

- Non-resident enrollment is a big issue. Collierville Schools will have an open enrollment policy for anyone outside municipal boundaries to apply to attend Collierville Schools. This will, obviously be subject to capacity and the non-resident’s continued academic and behavioral performance, and will have to be requested each year. Prioritization will be as follows:

  1. Children of Collierville Schools’ teachers who live outside the municipality
  2. Students currently enrolled at one of the 8 Collierville Schools
  3. Siblings of students currently enrolled at one of the 8 Collierville Schools
  4. Children of Collierville employees who live outside the municipality
  5. Students who are rezoned by SCS and live in closer proximity to the Collierville School they want to attend than to the school where they are zoned
  6. Remaining Shelby County residents not covered in 1-5 above.

There will be no tuition for any Shelby County resident to attend Collierville Schools. Those outside the county will be assessed a fee based on various factors (fairly nominal) and those from out of state will be accepted on a case by case basis only and will be charged a fee equivalent to the average cost to educate a single student in the state of TN. Any contribution by the student’s ‘home’ district will offset these fees.

Open enrollment will take place in the spring of each year. Students attending school outside their assigned attendance zone will not be eligible for transportation provided by Collierville Schools.

Note: this year, CMSD will perform an early enrollment effort in order to create firm planned attendance counts for each school shortly after spring break, which will then allow the school office to start the open enrollment process.

The non-resident enrollment policy will be subject to review and adjustment on an annual basis.

- In-district transfers will be handled similar to open enrollment. The prioritization listed above will apply there as well.

These administrative policies will be voted on at the special called meeting on March 4, 6 pm at the Collierville Town Hall.

Following these policy readings, the Superintendent provided an update around the interlocal agreements that are under development with Bartlett. In these agreements, Bartlett will provide for the following services: planning, payroll and IT services and Collierville will provide nutrition, transportation and PowerSchool administration. Mr Aitken explained that the Bartlett and Collierville districts have a lot in common and are not in competition with eachother, and will be able to offer these services to other municipalities on a per-student pricing as desired. When asked, Mr Aitken confirmed that nutrition will be run out of school-based kitchens. This was met with applause from the audience.

Finally, Mr Hansen provided an update around the discussions with Germantown. Basically, he indicated that there are some differences of opinion around Germantown’s desire to charge fees for non-residents to attend. It is still possible an agreement will be reached that will structure attendance zoning of Collierville residents that are currently zoned to a Houston school or Dogwood Elementary, but it also seems that sufficient capacity will be available at these schools so that Collierville residents can apply to be enrolled there through Germantown’s open enrollment policies. This will be dependent on, and subject to, Germantown’s policies, which should be finalized soon. In case of open enrollment at Germantown schools by Collierville residents, those students/families will have to provide for their own transportation.

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Can I feed my family of 5 on SNAP’s $4.50 a day (per recipient)?

(I am blessed enough to not qualify for SNAP… )

I have been hearing about the SNAP (formerly known as foodstamps) benefit being cut later this month… And there have been people, including Panera CEO Ron Shaig, weighing in on this, and he is even trying to ‘live on $4.50 a day,’ and having a very hard time doing so.

My first thought about this was that SNAP self-defines itself as the “Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.” Merriam Webster has these definitions: “Supplemental - added to something else to make it complete” and “Assistance - the act of helping or assisting someone.” Please note the program does not pretend to ‘provide for’ or ‘fully feed’ or anything like that. It is a form of HELP. It is to supplement the grocery budget for those who need help…

And then I ran the math…

For a family of 5 (like mine), $4.50 per recipient per day is $22.50 a day, $157.50 a week, and $675 a month (30 days). How is a family of 5 supposed to live on that (if we ignore the ‘supplemental assistance’ concept)?

The outrage! The cruelty!

In fact, my (wealthy?) family of 5 has a monthly grocery budget of $500. Wait… how much? $500. Obviously, I must starve my kids… Please call DCS!

I will admit, we do eat out occasionally, and that doesn’t come from the grocery budget. It comes from our dining out budget, which is $200 a month. And since I am pretty sure that dining out generally costs more than a home-cooked meal, I think I just proposed that meals for a family of 5 for $675 actually seems quite reasonable. I also get non-food items out of my grocery budget, which is not possible when using the SNAP debit cards…

A local columnist (Wendi Thomas from the Memphis Commercial Appeal – I would provide a link but they have a crappy paywall on their site preventing access to the content…) argued it would be ‘hard to eat healthy’ on $4.50 a day. I guess I want to point out here that the opposite is true:

My family eats a reasonable amount of fresh (and frozen) vegetables and fruit. We have bananas, blueberries, strawberries, grapes, apples and pineapples in our house right now. We have boxes of salad mix (which is more costly than buying by the head of lettuce), carrots, celery, lima beans, peas, corn, green beans, black beans and bell peppers in our regular rotation of vegetables. We eat a lot of chicken breast (again more costly than a whole chicken), lean ground beef, pork chops, tuna (canned) and fresh salmon. We only buy whole grain bread. We consume a lot of (whole grain (read: more costly)) frozen waffles, Cheerios (brand name), Nutella, peanut butter, greek yogurt, quinoa (great deal at Costco!) and other tasty and mostly wholesome foods. Oh, and tons of luxury foods… Scallops, fancy orange juice, desserts, juice boxes, snack foods, the occasional six-pack of beer, etc. We eat well.

While I get some of these items at Costco, I get most of my groceries at Kroger and Target. I am enough of a snob to avoid Wal-Mart for groceries, and I have only been inside an Aldi once – it just didn’t click for me. I know I can save $10-20 a week by shopping at Wal-Mart and Aldi instead of Kroger and Target… My sister-in-law loves taking the Aldi flyer (with all the super low-price fruits and veggies) to Wal-Mart and make use of their larger selection and price match policy.

Did I mention I do all this for essentially $675 or less a month? I guess that sounds a lot richer than $4.50 per recipient per day…

My kids’ elementary school (they are 10, 8 and 8) serves free breakfast to everyone. And, of course, free lunch to those who qualify (which any SNAP recipient would). But I make their (wholesome I think) breakfast each morning, and they carry their lunch boxes which contains a balanced meal (and a cute note from mom). Would using those school meal benefits reduce a recipient’s SNAP funds? No. Some, if not most, local schools also provide free dinner on days with after school activities. Making use of these school meals would allow a SNAP beneficiary to redirect some spending to other meals…

Look… I am not judging here… and I am not arguing that the SNAP benefits should be cut. I am providing this mini-rant as a reality check on whether it is reasonable to expect a poor family to feed themselves on $4.50 a day. (Did I mention that is not even the expectation?)

I fully realize that my elementary school kids don’t eat as much as teenagers, and that baby formula can put a serious dent in a grocery budget… But those teenagers would get breakfast and lunch paid for 180 days in the year (through school) and many other days they could get a dinner through school.

I also realize that regionally, food costs may be higher than at my local grocery store. I acknowledge it is possible someone’s benefits are less than the $4.50 a day that’s being used in all these news articles…

The two points I wanted to make are:
1. Despite the anguish in a lot of media, $4.50 per recipient per day can be more than enough for a family.
2. The program is intended to help with the grocery budget. Not replace it.

In the mean time, if you feel passionate about these things, and have the opportunity to, please consider donating to some of these programs that further help to supplement meals (I do):

http://www.midsouthfoodbank.org/

http://www.mifa.org/

And more: http://www.foodpantries.org/ci/tn-memphis

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So you don’t like who’s in charge…

I have some friends – facebook friends, real friends, family members, too, actually, who seem to gain power from criticizing leaders whose ideology does not match theirs.

As far as political leaders goes, there is a solid core of these dem-bashers… Doesn’t matter who it is, they disagree. There is name calling, ranting, overall criticism…

You know what struck me that all these have in common? It is nothing but negativity in these comments, blogs, articles and columns they produce and/or replicate. It can be OK to occasionally post some negative comment about a topic, but all the time?

If you want to make a difference, do you do so by creating further polarization? By poisoning the environment? By being (or coming across as) bitter? I do think we can usually agree that a certain issue is not the way it should be… So how much do you think you are contributing by only offering criticism of the other party’s proposed solutions? Do you have a better idea? Why don’t you convert all that bitterness, anger and vitriol into a positive contribution to the problem at hand?

So maybe your idealistic partners have a completely different proposal than the one that seems to be winning favor? What do you think will have more success: ranting and raving against the winning solution, or finding ways to improve the winning solution in order to make it less objectionable? Yes, it will require you agreeing to compromise (the horror!), working together and establishing relationships with your opponents.

Is that giving up on your ideals? NO! It is applying your ideals to reality. Reality… You know – the place where we all live! We cannot control the world around us – so the best we can do is to try and contribute to it in a positive manner… Not sit on the sidelines and complain – although it may make you feel superior!

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Health Care Reform

Can we all agree: the current system is not working well for a very large section of the US population?

So… do we ignore that? Try to fix it?

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A Blog… Seriously?

Yes! Seriously!

Why?

So, I am a verbal processor. I have to put a thought into words, either written or spoken, in order to really formulate a position on something. I have always played at the edge of being a writer. I am meticulous (now I am inviting comments on grammar and spelling, aren’t I?) in what I publish, whether it is an email, or a Facebook status update, or a comment to a status update.

Lately, I have found myself wanting to respond to Facebook statuses posted by my ‘friends,’ not just because I did not agree with what they wrote, but more importantly (to me), they were using flawed arguments to support their opinions. I would write a response to a status in a comment, and then delete it before publishing, because they do not need me to attack them on their own Facebook status… If someone wants to hear my opinion, they will have to ask me, or find my blog (yes, it is mine… I control it 100%!) and read about it.

Now that we have gotten that out of the way, I can try and tell you what the blog is about… I am calling it rants, raves and reality checks. Every post will be one or more of those. I figure that should buy me sufficient creative license to write just about anything I want to!

To wrap things up… thanks for reading… drop me a note to let me know you read something, and what you think…

Take care!

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