Thursday, February 25, 2010

Some area districts to ask for waiver for making up snow days

Some area school districts plan to apply to the state Department of Education for a waiver that would allow them to forgo making up days lost because of the recent snowstorm, while others say they will not.
Schools were closed for several days because of the snowstorm this month. As school boards meet in the weeks following the snowstorm, they are discussing what to do about the missed days. State law requires schools to be in session for 180 days by June 30 or lose state money.
District officials say they’ve been notified by the state that they can apply for a waiver if their schools were used as a warming shelter or if they were without power and would have been in session if electricity were available. However, they must also prove that they have made every effort to make up the missed days.
Canon-McMillan Superintendent Helen McCracken said she is applying for the waiver because several of the district’s elementary schools were without power and one was used as a warming station. She said district officials are collecting information and pictures to send to the state as part of the application.
She said students will go to school over spring break to show efforts to make up the days.
Burgettstown is not applying for the waiver, said Superintendent Deborah Jackson. The district didn’t lose power or use its schools as warming stations, she said. Changes to the calendar will be made at the March board meeting and then posted on the district Web site.
Washington has worked five of its seven missed days back into its schedule – Feb. 15, March 5, March 31, April 1 and May 28. However, the district hasn’t decided whether it will apply for a waiver, said school board President David Stotka. It’s waiting to see if the state will allow some days to automatically be waived, he said.
One issue that keeps coming up is whether graduation dates will change.
Trinity Acting Superintendent James Dick said he is working hard not to change the graduation date since many parents have already ordered announcements and made plans for graduation.
Trinity students will give up spring break on April 1 and April 5 and half of Good Friday on April 2, he said.
Good Friday will be an excused absence for those who want it off for religious reasons, he said.
“That’s how we can get our days in,” he said. “I don’t know how else to do that. If we get more snow days, we can petition the Department of Education to let us go for hours.”
Trinity’s graduation will still be June 4, and remaining students would attend school until June 7 or 8, Dick said.
Seniors can be tracked by hours attended instead of days, he said.
Avella decided to push its graduation date back from June 9 to June 16.
“I don’t want to move graduation one day six different times,” said Superintendent Wayde Killmeyer.
He had recommended adding days to the end of the school year and leaving days off for spring break. However, after discussion at a recent board meeting about the spring break days taking place right before Pennsylvania System of School Assessment testing, the board decided it wanted students in school on those days.
“I would prefer to move the days around so we have instructional time prior to the PSSA,” said board member Cyril Walther.
The board is waiting until March to approve an updated calendar in case there are more snow days over the next few weeks.

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would not mind if the school year was cut short if teachers agree to give up the pay for those missed days. I am tired of paying for people not working. Those are our tax dollars paying a teacher's salary. They get the summer off and choice holiday vacas, as well. I was expected to be at work when the weather was bad or I had to use a vacation or personal day.

I think they should either take the pay loss or change the date of graduation, move vacations to another month and finish out the school year.

March 1, 2010 at 11:18 AM  

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