Othello School Board OKS 2016-17 budget
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 2 months AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | September 14, 2016 1:45 PM
{{tncms-asset app="editorial" id="f65a0e0a-7acf-11e6-8767-977d94da750c"}}
OTHELLO — Othello School District officials approved the budget for 2016-17 at a special meeting this week.
The budget includes a $48,552,376 general fund. The general fund pays for most school operation, including salaries, supplies and school operation. The capital projects fund, which pays for construction, was budgeted at $3,440,000. The debt service fund pays back bonds issued for previous construction projects and was budgeted at $2,352,782. The Associated Student Body fund was budgeted at $457,100, and the transportation vehicle fund, which pays for new buses, was $275,000.
The board also approved a new, two-year master agreement with the Othello Education Association (the union representing teachers) and a new agreement with the Public School Employees, the union representing classified staff.
The board approved new contracts with the administrative staff at its regular meeting Monday and considered a new agreement with the district’s coaches.
In other business, board members received a report on the district’s dual-language program at McFarland Middle School.
Dual-language instruction in Othello means classes in English and Spanish for all students in the program. District officials are working on a dual-language program at Lutacaga Elementary, with the goal of providing dual-language instruction to some students through high school.
Assistant Superintendent Pete Perez said the program at the middle school and Othello High School will grow as the program at Lutacaga grows, and that eventually about 25 percent of the middle school’s student body will be in the dual-language program. But right now there are few resources available for dual-language instruction, Perez said.
At the sixth-grade level there’s a lack of Spanish-language books and materials, and Othello teachers are translating some of their own materials, Perez said. Currently there’s no dual-language instruction in math and science.
District officials are looking at various solutions, including more materials for students in Spanish and teachers and extra training for teachers.
Hiawatha Elementary principal John Wiseman presented some information about the school following a site visit from the board.
Board members are visiting each school in the district during the school year, spending time talking to teachers, students and parents Sept. 6. Hiawatha’s test data for 2015-16 has been released, and the school didn’t meet the district or state standard in language arts or math. There were some bright spots, he said – fourth- and fifth-grade students showed improvement over the previous year.
ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER
Moses Lake School District, teachers union reach tentative agreement
MOSES LAKE — The Moses Lake Education Association announced late Friday night that the union has reached a tentative agreement with the Moses Lake School District. Classes will resume Monday, according to a press release from the MLEA.
Priest Rapids Dam oil spill still in cleanup stage
MATTAWA — People downstream of Priest Rapids Dam are being asked to look for evidence of oil on the waters of the Columbia River following a spill of mineral oil at the dam Wednesday. Department of Ecology officials are asking boaters to stay off the river between Priest Rapids and Pasco while crews work to clean up the oil, according to a PUD press release. Absorbent booms were put in the water to collect the oil downstream of the dam and are still there, said Christine Pratt, public information officer with the Grant County PUD, in the PUD press release. The booms will stay there until the Department of Ecology allows their removal.
Royal SD voters to decide on educational programs and operations levy in February
ROYAL CITY — Royal School District voters will be asked to accept or reject a two-year educational programs and operations levy request in a special election Feb. 10. If it’s approved, it would replace the district’s existing levy approved by voters in 2024. Royal Superintendent Roger Trail said the levy rate would remain unchanged.