Government
Date:
Tuesday, May 17, 2011 - 5:00pm to 8:00pm
Location:
Conference Room, Chapel Hill Public Library
If you've been following the creation of Chapel Hill's new Comprehensive Plan, then you know that the Town Council has selected a 15-member (plus 2 unnamed Council Members) "Initiating Committee" which is charged with developing the process through which the CP will be envisioned and created. The next step is to create a broad committee of what the Council calls "Stakeholders" who will serve as something like a huge focus group and light weight advisory committee throughout the CP process.
Below is the Town's announcement and URL for more CP information, including a well-hidden link to the application form to become a Stakeholder (also below under More info). I get the sense that no-one with a pulse and a Chapel Hill address will be turned away, but I'm not certain about that.
Hello NC residents!
On Tuesday, May 3rd, the North Carolina Association of Educators and the North Carolina Parent/Teacher Association are co-sponsoring a public education rally in Raleigh from 4 pm on. Buses and carpools of educators, public school employees, parents, students, and concerned citizens are travelling to Raleigh from Murphy to Manteo to show their concern about the 2011-2012 state budget, which cuts public education funding by $1 billion statewide. Please consider travelling to Raleigh in support of our public school system, its students, and its employees! And forward this to all your friends and family! I hope you can attend.
Loren
Here is a link to the actual budget proposal. http://www.ncleg.net/documentsites/Committees/HouseAppropriationsEducation/2011%20Session/2011-04-12%20Meeting/FRD_House_PropsedEducationBudget_2011-04-12.pdf
Here is a brief description of the impact that this budget proposal will have on public education if passed.
Local discretionary cuts $346.9 million (cuts 7,000 teacher jobs/or 9,000 TA jobs)
Teacher Assistants $258.6 million (cuts 8,000 jobs)
At-Risk Student Services $30.1 million (cuts 602 teacher jobs)
Noninstructional support personnel (cuts 2,380 jobs)
Academically/Intellectually Gifted (cuts 168 teacher jobs)
Central Office Administration $10.7 million (cut 150 jobs)
Assistant principals $24.7 million (cuts 329 jobs)
Limited English Proficiency $7.5 million (cuts 150 teacher jobs lost)
Transportation $20.7 million (cuts 1,035 bus drivers)
Teacher Academy Eliminated
Mentoring Eliminated
School Technology Eliminated
Staff development Eliminated
NC Science, Math and Technical
Education Center Eliminated
Office of Early Learning Eliminated
Educator Recruitment
and Development Eliminated
Governor’s Education Cabinet Eliminated.
NC Professional Teaching
Standards Commission Eliminated
Background Information: The proposed budget for K-12 education is scheduled for debate in the House Education Appropriations Subcommittee for a week, where changes can be made. A decision on salary cuts in the House version of the budget will be made once the proposal is forwarded to the full Appropriations Chairs. A House budget proposal is scheduled for a vote in late April after which the Senate forwards its proposal.
Here is a quick link to contact your House member.
http://www.capwiz.com/nea/nc/issues/alert/?alertid=41336506&type=ST&show_alert=1
Here is a link to a video of the debate that took place on the Senate floor over the proposed State Health Plan bill following Governor Perdue’s veto of the bill. Note the reference to NCAE as the culprit behind the Governor’s veto. Please join us in thanking Governor Perdue for taking a stand and supporting educators. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8W_Ge5hlu8&feature=player_embedded
Date:
Tuesday, May 3, 2011 - 4:30pm
Location:
state legislature and downtown Raleigh
As we've mentioned before here on OP, the Town of Chapel Hill is preparing to revise its decade-old Comprehensive Plan (CP). In addition to documenting something of a shared vision of the community, it is also used as the basis of the Town's LUMO (Land Use Management Ordinance) which contains the actual policies and regulations with which all developers must comply. In an attempt to ramp up the process of creating this community document, the Town Council is trying a new approach: they decided to empanel an "Initiating Committee" (IC) that will lay out the process through which the actual CP wil be created.
Via Town of Chapel Hill news list:
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt invites residents to join him in riding Chapel Hill's fare-free transit system, followed by free coffee and an informal conversation from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, April 20, at Starbucks at 103 E. Franklin Street.
The discussion about transportation issues in Chapel Hill will include updates on alternative transportation, including Chapel Hill Transit.
For more information, contact Len Cone at lcone@townofchapelhill.org or 919-969-5065.
Date:
Wednesday, April 20, 2011 - 9:30am to 10:30am
Location:
Starbucks, 103 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill
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