tv [untitled] September 9, 2010 3:00pm-3:30pm PST
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proposals. there is one to nine -- 106. this has already been moved and seconded on an june 8. we have our report. >> they heard this item and pass it on with the positive recommendation. >> the budget committee passes on with minor amendments. >> now we have a reading by commissioner yee. commissioner yee: to finance a student missing 10 or more days of school, regardless of whether they are excused or unexcused
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contributes to lower achievement starting in kindergarten. there is lower for four months for all children. among poor children, chronic absence predicted for achievement. this is a time they are more likely to have challenges the lead to chronic absences in subsequent years. students do not have equal opportunity to learn when they are chronically absent from school, and while it is often overlooked because most often reaching most tracks unexcused
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absence, both can mask children. good while chronic absence is higher in secondary schools, it is crucial to start addressing among the youngest children. whereas in san francisco, many students are missing 10% of the school days, at least 16 of the elementary schools have a chronic absentees didn't rate of 16% or higher. whereas many utilize a variety
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of strategies to reduce chronic absentees, whereas a careful analysis of chronic absence-that is essential because it can have greater impact in approaching the problem to case management, and whereas many students are engaged in after-school activities with community-based activities, and often students have developed close relationships with community workers, and whereas the department of youth and families is a close partner to help students become productive citizens and ready to work, and whereas the district is creating a plan in which
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educating parents can be incorporated, and whereas education can beat adversely affected, and by addressing chronic absence, the district can improve attendance, which can increase the resources available to all students. therefore, be it resolved the district requests the superintendent of schools to provide an annual analysis of patterns of elementary schools for schools, grades, and education and to reduce the rate to moment -- to no more than 10% by the end of 2012 through 2014 school year.
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this will focus on schools during the 2010 through the 2011 school year to reduce the chronic absentee rates by at least 5%. each will be decided by the basis of grant funds. at the end of 2013, they will reassess the targets for absence reduction, given progress made over the past three years. the superintendent has requested each elementary school site to create a student monitoring team.
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they will provide an analysis of barriers. each school will develop a message of reducing chronic absences -- a way of reducing chronic absences, and they will partner with community programs and after-school programs to get children to school, and further, be it resolved the district will take steps to insure the ability to regularly produce reports on attendance data. that is the end of that. >> thank you, commissioner yee. we have two speakers signed up on this item.
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two minutes each. >> thank you. it is a pleasure to be here during dead -- to be here. i will say the challenges san francisco faces are present throughout this country, and i am the proud mother of two unified school district children -- that you are taking a step to make a difference on this key issue. this is a really important proposal, and i want to say a few things to drive home the point. i think chronic absence is one of the points we should be tracking if we want to reduce
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the achievement gap. it is a sign of academic failure, both for individual kids, but if you have a large number is not getting to school in the first place, we know that school is not going to be able to perform academically. reducing public absence has the benefit of increasing state revenues, so we win in every way possible, but in san francisco, we do not monitor the chief point. we all think this is great. you could still have 30 kids chronically absent. it depends whether they are distributed throughout the student body.
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network. this is comprised of private foundations, public departments, and community-based organizations. the school district is actually a member, and we appreciate active participation. our policy committee has a focus on developing economic success. one of the key strategies is on education, promoting education to support parents and support the children. we raised so many children not being prepared, so we want to applaud you for shedding light on this issue.
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we are a city known for lacking in coordination. looking at his provides a key opportunity to look at the various resources to bring to bear on addressing a challenge that is not simply a school challenge. we stand prepared to insure that all children have the ability to be prepared. thank you. >> thank you. i would like to take comments from the board. commissioner fewer: i would like to speak to what the public speakers said.
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during the committee meeting, we did discuss, and you emphasize the need to have more information, and we had a discussion. it is true we have not been collecting data. we turned the conversation to chronic absenteeism. i think we all came to the conclusion that this is a problem that we need to address and that we actually do have
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some resources, but that we can collect better data collectors around this issue. >> i want to thank the speakers who came out to support this. the data was collected as part of it, and i think if we're going to pass this and take it seriously, we should probably do another analysis so they will actually know where they started from. >> commissioner norton. commissioner norton: i think this is important. it is the students that are gone
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continually and missing a lot of school, but not in chunks. it does add up. thank you for bringing this up. >> this is one of those things we paid attention to, and we had some starts and stops. i think one of the most important things is that we have to put more attention on elementary school absences. most people in the community think it is about not showing up for school, which is an area of concern, but the habits of life that are formed when kids miss a lot of school and do not learn it is their job to show up for school are really having a tremendously negative impact on their lives.
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i think it is important that we recognize chronic absence among elementary school students is an adult issue. we have a responsibility to make sure we change the pattern. i hope this will work, and i like the idea of starting with the schools. hopefully, it would give us some resources. also, it gives us an opportunity to integrate into the other strategies of school improvement we are developing, so i am very supportive of this and hopefully will be following through.
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>> i want to make decisions i think will help as well. we're having a tendency part of the questions that are asked when it comes to any of the reporting that is happening, so they are asking questions about attendance and when parents are engaged, they are also being asked about attendance. often one student will cut five departments, and we have been working collaborative lay -- collaborative flav -- collaboratively around shared data.
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you have a more collaborative association. if there is the case across the board that reaches all of the departments with one person reporting, we are hoping this is going to help with that. the last point is we want to set a goal for ourselves, and we are not only looking at how we reduce truancy but how we move students who have been chronically absent and moving them to 20 days. that really makes a difference. we really do need to start looking at the number of days
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our kids are missing. i want to thank the commissioner for bringing this as well. we are seeing a lot more citywide support to bring this in the school. >> i just want to thank the commissioner, because it does start at the elementary level. if you get used to not going to school, you will get into have it in high school as well. i noticed it said using schools as more of a tool, and i want to see in the future if a high- school level parents will be able 0 give more involved in how many absences they have been reduced that number.
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-- and reduce that number. >> any other comments? >> i'd just want to thank commissioner yee for bringing this before us, and i am glad we are going to do some work around it. roll call please. [calling votes] >> six ayes. >> now we are coming to our general public comments. we have quite a number of speakers for this item. i will read it in the number we got it. [list of names] you will have two minutes each.
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>> good evening. i am a professional staff. after eight or nine meetings last friday, proposals were still across the table from both parties, and they stated they would actually bring different proposals for each meeting. they decided to propose an impasse. they were mainly punctuated with failure to bargain, refusal to bargain, and aggressive bargaining. they moved on to file a complaint against the school district and found out there
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were a bases behind that complaint. today i received the notification that says, we will bargain, but we will be withholding our position. in our view, it is nothing short of failure to bargain, and i am here to tell you we will literally challenge the impasse. you are having a serious problem. i intend to organize the workers we have. i intend to mobilize them and i with the behavior of the school district. come here, and i am here to bargain.
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i am here to tell you there are a variety of issues. they are fully aware of some of the issues i am about to bring up. those are failure to pay your workers in regards to overtime. gethey are encouraged not to enter that they work overtime. absolutely illegal. then you have situations of additional problems. you also have issues of contract thing, which is coming out of your office again. there is quite a bit of illegal activity, and we will address it. >> thank you.
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miss miller. >> good evening, commissioner, president kim, supervisor garcia. i am here on behalf of karen fisher of, -- karins bishop and all of our members. i am here to tell you about the negotiations and the failure on the part of the school district to bargain in good faith. i am also here to tell you it was our members keeping the schools clean, feeding your children, taking care of everything going on in schools. i know the teachers are doing their jobs, but members are doing a good job, too. you have constantly told our members how good they are, how special they are, but our members deserve to sit at the table and bargain in good faith.
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they depend on the barkentine to negotiate a contract in good faith, -- depend on bargaining to negotiate a contract on good faith. they expect at an impasse. thank you. >> good evening. i am the parent of a child at the san francisco unified school district. a comment was made about the fact that we are desperate for money. school districts across the united states are desperate for money. what brings me here this evening is a $1.5 million grant from the department of education between your tax dollars and my tax dollars for the purpose of supporting russian heritage language learners.
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this is an interesting grant. if this was 10 years ago, it would not be a problem, but it is not 10 years ago. we have four furlough days. this is at a time when they are suggesting extending the school year. we are letting go of teachers. the student teacher ratio is out of whack, and we have a $1.5 million grant to enhance the learning experiences of two ethnic groups. it does not make sense. if we need the money, let's allocate it so it is keeping schools open and programs intact. i wrote letters to a number of commissioners. i have not received a response. i would call on san francisco unified to rescinds this grant and reallocate the funds so it is keeping schools open and keeping things active in the district. we have a quick response.
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>> for the record, we have no say. that grant is for that purpose. we do not have the freedom to take that grants and move it in any other direction. we did not write the rules. that grant was put out, and we applied for it, because we have a need, but we do not have a choice of what we do with the funds. >> somebody wrote a grant proposal. >> the money is available. you go for the grant, or somebody else gets the grant. >> maybe it is the u.s. government. i did write to arnie duncan perry dead -- to arnie duncan. >> thank you. >> good evening, commissioners. i will say one positive thing
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