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Education News for 08-28-2012

State Education News

  • Vouchers meet special needs (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Hundreds of Ohio students who have special needs are getting help paying for private schooling for the first time this school year…Read more...

  • Schools tap local farms for produce (Columbus Dispatch)
  • A growing number of schools in Ohio are buying broccoli and beef from farms down the road, boosting local economies and teaching children about the value of locally grown food…Read more...

  • Education, innovation keys to improving economy (Newark Advocate)
  • One of the country's most influential monetary policymakers said generations past have shown two clear markers for lifting Ohio…Read more...

  • TPS training zeroes in on class behavior (Toledo Blade)
  • Teacher training never stops, even in the summer, and Toledo Public Schools professional development has a twist this year…Read more...

  • Worthington Survey Shows 50 Percent Of Students Do Not Feel Respected (WBNS)
  • Worthington City Schools recently asked students, teachers, parents and administrators a few things about their schools' culture and climate. Two of the top issues included in the survey were drug use and bullying…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Brecksville-Broadview Heights school board, unions agree to new contracts (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • By a 4-1 vote, with Mark Dosen being the lone dissenter, the Brecksville-Broadview Heights school board voted to accept the new agreements with the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Education Association…Read more...

  • Hamilton school staff prepares for school year (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • The faculty and staff of Hamilton City Schools kicked off the school year Monday with an welcome back presentation from Superintendent Janet Baker…Read more...

  • Ready, get set, learn: Students back in school (Mansfield News Journal)
  • Mansfield City Schools, St. Peter's and Lexington schools return to the classroom today. St. Peter's fourth-grade teacher Julie Braumberger is excited to begin the year. On Monday she was readying her classroom, where she will have 23 students…Read more...

  • STEP brings teachers and businesses together (Newark Advocate)
  • When Melissa Felumlee's science students ask her, 'When will we ever have to use this?' she now has plenty of real life examples to share…Read more...

  • School officials juggle for Perrysburg growth (Toledo Blade)
  • Perrysburg schools' rising enrollment is "a drop in the bucket and pretty soon the bucket is full," Superintendent Thomas Hosler said a few days before the school returns to session…Read more...

  • Westerville, Olentangy Students May Spend Some Snow Days Online (WBNS)
  • Students in the Westerville and Olentangy school districts may spend a few snow days online this school year. Both districts said they have filed paperwork to hold classes online for up to three days a year…Read more...

Editorial

  • Prestige to match a noble profession (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • Teaching is a noble profession. What teachers do matters because they help shape the future. Political figures make speeches to that effect all the time…Read more...

Education News for 07-18-2012

Local Issues

  • Brecksville-Broadview Heights school board meeting draws hundreds as teacher negotiations continue (Sun News)
  • Emotions ran high at the July 17 Brecksville-Broadview Heights Board of Education, as teachers, parents and residents asked tough questions of the board in front of a crowd about 300 people. Jeff Luce, who recently resigned from his post as Advanced Placement math teacher at Brecksville-Broadview Heights High School after 18 years, said he was concerned the board would bypass more qualified teachers for younger — and less expensive — educators. Read more...

  • No mediation sessions yet slated in NB contract talks (Findlay Courier)
  • NORTH BALTIMORE - North Baltimore school officials and the teachers' union are checking their calendars to arrange a date for a mediator to join stalled contract talks. An impasse in negotiations was declared recently and a mediator was contacted. "We're waiting for dates they have available," Eve Baldwin, the school district's treasurer and a member of the board's negotiating team, said Tuesday. Vacation schedules have made arranging a date challenging. Read more...

  • New Lex students to get iPads through lease deal (Times Recorder)
  • NEW LEXINGTON - Summer's end might be unwelcome, but New Lexington High School students will have a something to ease their pain this year -- free iPads. New Lexington City Schools recently signed a three-year lease with Apple. The district will pay $416,316 -- three payments of $138,772 -- and in return will receive 600 32GB iPads with WiFi. That equates to about $690 per iPad over the three-year lease. That's more than the $599 list price to buy a new iPad outright, but the New Lex deal also comes with a two-year protection plan. Read more...

  • District adds business chief (Tribune Chronicle)
  • WARREN - A former superintendent from Trumbull County is returning to the area to work at the city school district - as its executive director of business operations. Warren City Schools Board of Education on Tuesday unanimously appointed Michael Wasser of McDonald to the post. He was awarded a one-year contract, which provides an annual salary of roughly $90,000, effective July 23, 2012, through June 30, 2013. Wasser is replacing Michael Notar, who moved from the position to the high school principal's seat earlier this year. Read more...

Editorial

  • Promising plan (Findlay Courier)
  • Suppose, with one good idea, we could: Decide the fate of Findlay's Central Middle School after students move out this winter? Keep at least part of the beloved old school around for our lifetimes? Save a key property from becoming an embarrassing, gaping hole in Findlay's downtown, and huge parking lot for no one in particular? This seems to be the promise of a plan for a performing arts center built around the Central Middle School auditorium and unveiled to the public via the Findlay Board of Education. Read more...

Education News for 07-13-2012

Statewide Stories of the Day

  • Senate explores limits to schools’ use of restraints (Dispatch)
  • WASHINGTON — Violently restraining and secluding problematic students in small, inescapable areas actually increases assaults and behavior problems, experts yesterday told a Senate committee that is considering legislation to curtail the practice. Many schools rely on seclusion and restraint to control students with behavior problems, especially minorities and those with disabilities, according to Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Read more...

  • Officials stress literacy — by reading to preschoolers (News-Sun)
  • SPRINGFIELD — A new law requiring children to read on grade level to move past the third grade has made literacy at an early age more critical than ever for Ohio families, according to local officials. State Sen. Chris Widener, R-Springfield, and Clark County Sheriff Gene Kelly visited Creative World of Learning, a local child care center, to read with preschool students and stress the importance of literacy skills Thursday morning. Read more...

  • Lisbon holding out hope for an ‘A’ (Morning Journal)
  • LISBON -While the school district is currently expected to receive a B on the next state report card, it could still earn an A by the time the report cards are issued next month. School Superintendent Don Thompson reported at this week's school board meeting preliminary results have the district receiving an "effective rating," or B, but they could end up with an A, or "excellent rating" once the value-added component is figured in, which has yet to be done. Read more...

Local Issues

  • Pay-to-play at Frontier tabled; lunch costs to increase (Marietta Times)
  • NEW MATAMORAS - The Frontier Local Board of Education tabled a proposal to charge a participation fee for sports Thursday and voted to increase student lunch prices by a quarter. The agenda for the board's regular meeting Thursday included an item to approve an athletic participation fee of $25 per sport, with an annual maximum of $50 for one student and $75 for one family. The subject was broached at the June board meeting, but Superintendent Bruce Kidder and board members said Thursday they hadn't received any input from residents about the policy. Read more...

  • Brecksville-Broadview Heights school board will continue with negotiations (Sun News)
  • In response to the July 11 announcement that the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Education Association had taken a strike authorization vote, the Brecksville-Broadview Heights school board said it will continue to negotiate with the unions on a fair and equitable contract. The vote does not mean that the union is on strike or will strike. It means that if the board forces a contract on the union, the union could give a 10-day notice and then strike. As of now, the board has not forced a contract on the union. Read more...

  • West Geauga School District earns award for financial reporting (News-Herald)
  • The Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting has been awarded to the West Geauga School District by the Government Financial Officers Association of the U.S. and Canada for its comprehensive annual financial report. The award is the highest form of recognition in the area of governmental accounting and financial reporting and its attainment represents a significant accomplishment by a government and its management. Read more...

Education News for 06-28-2012

Statewide Stories of the Day

  • City schools may face 3 audits over attendance records (Dispatch)
  • The Ohio Department of Education told Columbus City Schools it has two weeks to turn over records and communication concerning district administrators changing student attendance records. The department will hire an independent auditor to look into allegations that district officials manipulated attendance to improve the state report card. The state auditor’s office said yesterday it, too, would launch its own probe, meaning up to three auditing teams — including the district’s internal auditors — could investigate the charges. Read more...

  • DREAM Act for Ohio proposed (Dispatch)
  • Ohio’s version of the DREAM Act, designed to make the children of illegal immigrants eligible for in-state tuition and financial aid, was rolled out this week by a pair of Senate Democrats. “This bill is necessary to offer all students the chance of achieving the American dream,” said Sen. Charleta B. Tavares, D-Columbus, who jointly sponsored the bill with Sen. Tom Sawyer, D-Akron. “This country was built on the foundation of encouraging individuals to reach their highest potential. We should not penalize young people for striving for success.” Read more...

  • Brecksville-Broadview Heights city school negotiations turned over to federal mediation (WOIO 19 CBS)
  • BRECKSVILLE - Brecksville-Broadview Heights City School District Board has determined that the only way to move stalled negotiations forward is by turning them over to a federal mediator, according to David Tryon, board president. "We have given the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Education Association (BEA), the union that represents area teachers, written notice declaring impasse and requested the services of the federal mediator pursuant to Section 9 (H.) of the current agreement," said Tryon. Read more...

Local Issues

  • Two aides to be fired over abuse of student in seclusion room (Dispatch)
  • There was no reason for two school aides to take a boy into a seclusion room, close the door and then pin him in a way that is so dangerous it could have killed him, the Columbus school district says. The boy hadn’t been violent and didn’t pose a danger to anyone, a district investigation found. Beatty Park Elementary aides Fred Harrison and Leslie A. Polk will be fired, the district says. “Schools are not supposed to hurt,” noted hearing officer Jerry McAfee in his report. The hearing to determine the aides’ guilt took place in late May, and a decision was reached last week. Read more...

  • Carlisle district’s cuts create surplus (Middletown Journal)
  • CARLISLE — Through more than $1 million in budget cuts, the Carlisle School Board was able to turn a projected deficit for fiscal year 2013 into a small surplus, but Treasurer Dan Bassler says the district still needs some help. “We went from a projected budget deficit of $860,000 to a surplus, by cutting that much out of our budget,” Bassler said. “But as of now, that would give us a $160,000 surplus after the year. That’s not a whole lot to get excited about. “We’re still going to need money and support from the citizens of Carlisle.” Read more...

  • Getting primed and ready (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - Children entering kindergarten in the city schools are getting a summer primer for what it means to be good citizens and good students. The students are participating in Success By Six, a program of the United Way of Youngstown and the Mahoning Valley that prepares children for kindergarten. The PNC Foundation is funding Community Solution’s Project KIND program this week. Project KIND — Keys to Improvement for Necessary Development — focuses on social and emotional skills. Read more...

  • Program offers boost to dropouts (Blade)
  • A new collaboration among Owens Community College, Toledo Public Schools, and Gateway to College National Network is designed to help high school dropouts continue their education. The program allows those between ages 16 and 20 who are high school dropouts or likely to drop out to complete their high school diploma requirements while also earning college credit. They will be dually enrolled at TPS and Owens until completion of a high school diploma. Read more...

  • Niles board OKs contract (Tribune Chronicle)
  • NILES - The Niles Education Association and the district agreed on a contract that will provide no base salary increases through this and the next school years but will allow eligible teachers to receive their step increases this year and a half-step increase next year. Those teachers who are not eligible for step increases in the 2012 and the 2013 school years will receive one-time stipends of between $250 and $500, depending on whether they are on the single or family medical insurance plans. Read more...

  • C-TEC approves 2 percent payment for teachers (Newark Advocate)
  • NEWARK - C-TEC teachers will receive a one-time payment of 2 percent of their salaries in 2013 in lieu of a raise. "It's not an increase to the base," Board President Bev Niccum said. The payment will be paid throughout the year, totaling 2 percent. The Career and Technology Education Centers of Licking County has extended the same payment to all full- time, non-union employees, excluding the superintendent and treasurer. One percent of C-TEC's payroll is about $53,000. Read more...

  • Fairfield to vote on bus contracts (Journal-News)
  • FAIRFIELD — The Fairfield City Schools Board of Education is expected to vote on bus contracts at its regular meeting Thursday. The agenda for the regular meeting at 6 p.m. in the community room at Fairfield High School states that staff recommends approval of contracts with Burer’s Garage, which would handle bus maintenance through 2015, and with Universal Transportation Services, which would handle special needs transportation through 2017. Read more...

  • Mediocrity Not An Option For ‘Differently Abled’ Students (WBNS 10 CBS)
  • COLUMBUS - From a distance, Colerain Elementary School looks like any school in central Ohio. Up close, though, it is a place unlike any other. Each student is held to the same “rise and shine expectations” during their time at the school, regardless of whether they walk or wheel through the hallways, 10TV’s Kristyn Hartman reported. Jose Mendez, 11, zooms through the halls in a chair he controls with his foot. Read more...

  • Summer school changes with technology at West Geauga, Willoughby South (News-Herald)
  • Area students needing to attend summer school for remediation purposes or choosing to do so to get ahead on their education may find themselves leaning more heavily on technology than teachers. Such is the case in the West Geauga School District, where all classes are taken online through the IQity program. Middle School Principal Jim Kish coordinates summer school for the district. Read more...

Editorial

  • Wrong turn (Dispatch)
  • Many Central Ohioans rely on a dependable and affordable public transit system, especially in an economy where more people are riding the bus because they are lucky enough to still have jobs or need the bus to look for work or go to school. Transit-union leaders should be mindful of this as they lead workers at the Central Ohio Transit Authority to the brink of a strike which could hit on the eve of one of the city’s biggest Downtown-commuting events, Red, White and Boom. Read more...

  • If Cleveland school offices make a move, it has to be the right one (Plain Dealer)
  • Anyone who has ever considered moving knows just how much planning it requires, including the basic questions: Should you buy a new home or lease an apartment? Live in the heart of the city or farther out? That's doubly so for the Cleveland School District, which is considering selling its grand downtown office on East Sixth Street and moving to a new location, as yet unknown. Moves can be difficult, but this one, done right, should be a win-win for the district and residents. Read more...

Education News for 06-27-2012

Statewide Stories of the Day

  • Kasich asks agencies not to seek more funds (Dispatch)
  • Those looking for a sign that state agencies will soon see relief from the punishing economic downturn won’t find much to like in Gov. John Kasich’s latest budget move. But those who have observed Kasich’s desire to hold the line on spending should not be surprised that he has asked state agencies to start the next budget process with plans to spend no more than what they are getting in fiscal year 2013, which starts on July 1. Read more...

  • U.S. Department of Education data shows career-training graduates struggle to repay loans (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND — Students who completed career-training programs at almost 100 institutions across the country, including one in Northeast Ohio, have so much difficulty repaying their student loans that the schools could be banned from offering federal financial aid, according to data released Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Education. The federal agency has put those schools on notice for failing to meet any of the three benchmarks set by its Gainful Employment regulations. Read more...

  • Elida schools to seek earned-income tax (Lima News)
  • ELIDA — Elida school officials said they listened to voters who say they want an alternative to property taxes. Now they hope those voters come through for them. The school board unanimously voted Tuesday to put a five-year, 0.75 percent earned-income tax on the November ballot. It will raise $2.06 million a year for operations and keep the district out of deficit spending, where it is headed in two years. Superintendent Don Diglia said officials talked to a lot of people before deciding to go with an income tax. Read more...

    The Ohio Coalition for Quality Education (Miamisburg) had an exclusive video discussion on education issues with two of Ohio's leading policymakers. You can view this video here…

Local Issues

  • Panel: Delay Columbus schools tax vote until 2013 (Dispatch)
  • A citizens committee urged the Columbus school board not to go to voters in November for a tax increase, but rather wait until next year. The panel voted 8-2 yesterday morning to delay putting new millage on the ballot until either the spring or fall of 2013. While Superintendent Gene Harris offered the committee two options that would have placed an issue on this November’s ballot, the panel shot down those proposals. Each option would have totaled 7.5 mills, adding about $230 in new tax for each $100,000 in appraised property value. Read more...

  • Wickliffe Schools looking into privatized bus service (News-Herald)
  • Tuesday's Wickliffe School Board meeting featured comments from both sides about the possibility of the district switching to privatized school bus services. Matthew Molek, vice president of Ohio Association of Public Schools Employees local 196, which includes district bus drivers, asked the board to hold off on considering privatizing bussing, at least until the union's current contract runs up. "Right now we are right in the middle of our contract," Molek said. "My comment is: Honor the contract until next year, and we'll look at it then." Read more...

  • Brecksville-Broadview Heights City School District contracts expire June 30 (Sun News)
  • June 30 is the last day of the current contract for nearly 450 teachers and support staff in the Brecksville-Broadview Heights City School District. And that is a concern for both the unions and their supporters. Those concerns were voiced June 25 when the employees and supporters crammed into the Board of Education building for the regular monthly school board meeting. According to a release from the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Education Association and the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Organization of Support Staff. Read more...

  • Residents urge board to reconsider options (Vindicator)
  • Austintown - Public displeasure continued to be voiced Tuesday over the current busing situation for Catholic students living in the township. A handful of residents, including township Trustee Jim Davis, addressed the Austintown school board during Tuesday’s regular meeting, urging the members to change their minds about cutting busing to Catholic schools outside of the township. The proposal, announced in May, offers public-transit vouchers to private-school students instead of using district vehicles. Read more...

  • Board gives thumbs-up for TPS' top officials (Blade)
  • The Toledo Board of Education gave its top two administrators a vote of confidence Tuesday in midyear evaluations. The board expressed support for both Superintendent Jerome Pecko and Treasurer Matt Cleland after conducting evaluations last week in closed meetings. The evaluation results read publicly Tuesday did not include any rating of performance or specific areas identified by the board as weaknesses or strengths in either man's performance. Read more...

  • Board of Education extends Eric S. Gordon's contract as CEO for 3 Years (WOIO 19 CBS)
  • CLEVELAND - Tuesday night, the Cleveland Board of Education voted to extend Eric S. Gordon's contract as Chief Executive Officer through June 2015. Gordon previously served CMSD as its Chief Academic Officer from 2007 to 2011. After a national search produced three finalists from outside the district in its search for a CEO last year, the Board by-passed the top candidates for CEO and awarded a one-year contract to Gordon in June, 2011. Read more...

Editorial

  • What to do with Ohio's extra cash (Plain Dealer)
  • On Saturday, Ohio closes the books on this fiscal year -- the first of two in the Ohio biennial budget -- and opens another check register. Thanks to an uptick in the local economy as well as good management by Gov. John Kasich and the General Assembly, Ohio is, and will stay, in the black. Probably next week, Budget Director Tim Keen will announce final 2011-12 numbers, but some trends already are clear. For the 11 months ending May 31, tax collections were $1.3 billion (7.8 percent) greater than the year-earlier period while spending fell by $130 million (0.5 percent). Read more...

  • More money not sure fix for schools (Tribune Chronicle)
  • Ohio has received high marks from researchers looking into how public education funding is handled. But tell that to officials and taxpayers in financially beleaguered school districts. They understand that good grades in a national study are one thing, but the reality of not being able to balance a district's budget is something else. Just three states - Ohio, New Jersey and Utah - received ''A'' grades for education financing in a study by Rutgers University and the Education Law Center. Read more...

Education News for 03-23-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Schools rethink using tournament accounts (Dispatch)
  • Some central Ohio schools are reining in bank accounts run by athletic directors in the wake of allegations that sports officials misused money in two local districts. Worthington and Gahanna-Jefferson already have closed the accounts that their athletic directors used to host state tournaments, and others, including Dublin, Pickerington and Westerville, plan to revise their policies. School athletic directors traditionally have managed bank accounts outside their districts, sometimes with little oversight. Read More…

  • Cleveland Teachers Union proposes concessions, alternatives to Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's school plan (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND - The Cleveland Teachers Union's counter-proposal to Mayor Frank Jackson's schools plan offers concessions in seniority rules and an alternative way to fix troubled schools, but draws a hard line on letting the district impose changes or toss out the existing contract. CTU leaders this week gave Jackson, legislators and schools Chief Executive Officer Eric Gordon three pages of proposed changes to Jackson's school transformation plan that CTU President David Quolke says includes an "incredible compromise" on how the district can lay off and recall teachers. Read More…

  • Many states loose on homeschooling regulations (Journal-News)
  • With ever-tougher academic standards coming from both state and federal legislatures, schools are under unprecedented, increasing pressure to perform well on a variety of measures, including mandatory testing and more rigorous teacher evaluations. But much of the pressure that trickles down to the students can be avoided when parents adopt a do-it-yourself approach to education. To many, homeschooling is an effective way for families to educate their children, to others it is a loosely regulated world of education. Read More…

  • Cheers to tests (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - “The OAA, it may be hard, but you can achieve and be a star.” That’s one of the cheers belted out Thursday by second-graders at William Holmes McGuffey Elementary School, urging their third- through fifth-grade schoolmates to prepare and do well on the Ohio Achievement Assessment tests April 23-25. Laycee Lenoir, 8, came up with the cheer with help from Danielle Walsh, 8. It took about 30 minutes, Laycee said. The girls in Becky Butcher’s class shook red and white pompoms from Youngstown State University; the boys did a cheer of their own. Read More…

  • Ohio auditor says closed Cleveland charter school misspent $578,000 (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND – The people who ran Greater Achievement Community School, a Cleveland charter school that closed in 2010, owe the state $578,357, according to a close-out audit released today by Ohio Auditor Dave Yost. Most of the findings go against Elijah Scott, who was identified as the "developer/title program coordinator/ superintendent" of Greater Achievement. The auditors found he deposited at least $46,000 of public money into his personal bank account from 2003 to 2010, the period covered by the audit. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Columbus schools consider zero-tolerance tobacco policy (Dispatch)
  • The Columbus school district is poised to expand its anti-smoking policy to ban all tobacco use on school property, which includes parking lots and sports venues. In practice, the district bars students or staff members from using any tobacco products, including chewing tobacco, spokesman Jeff Warner said. But the current policy says only that smoking is prohibited on all land and in all buildings and vehicles owned or leased by the district. The district is following the lead of the State Board of Education, which voted unanimously last year to adopt a model policy for Ohio’s districts. Read More…

  • Montgomery County develops education plan (Business Journal)
  • Montgomery County has developed an action plan to help more low-income kids succeed in school that doubles as an application for a national award. The plan, put together by civic, business and community leaders, centers on literacy, school readiness and attendance and summer learning for children from birth to 8 years old. “When kids are not reading by fourth grade, they almost certainly get on a glide path to poverty,” said Ralph Smith, senior vice president of the Annie E. Casey Foundation. Read More…

  • Brecksville and Broadview Heights safety forces, schools work together for disaster drill (Sun News)
  • BROADVIEW HEIGHTS — Residents in Brecksville and Broadview Heights should not be alarmed if they hear a cacophony of sirens blaring and see the local safety forces racing to and from Brecksville-Broadview Heights High School. At least not tomorrow. Building upon successful mock disaster drills in 2009 and 2011, the Brecksville-Broadview Heights City School District, along with the Brecksville and Broadview Heights police and fire departments. Read More…

  • Indian Valley High trading books for computers (Times Reporter)
  • GNADENHUTTEN — Indian Valley Local Schools have taken a step to leave behind the world of textbooks, paper and pencils and embrace 21st century technology as a way to educate its students. The board of education has approved the One-to-One Laptop Initiative, in which each student in the high school will be issued a laptop computer instead of textbooks. Classroom content will be delivered electronically. Students, in turn, will submit their homework to their teachers electronically and take tests electronically. Read More…

  • Hospital to provide sports medicine services to Hamilton schools (Journal-News)
  • HAMILTON — As a way of reaching out to the community, Kettering Health Network and The Fort Hamilton Hospital will soon begin providing the Hamilton City School District with free sports medicine services. “Part of our mission is to promote health and wellness in our community,” said Kettering Health Network spokesperson Elizabeth Long. “The health and wellness of student athletes is very important, so we are happy to lend our expertise. Read More…

Editorial

  • Deficit of trust (Beacon Journal)
  • All of Northeast Ohio should be watching closely the efforts of Mayor Frank Jackson to remake the troubled Cleveland public schools. The point often is made, and rightly so, about the region’s future depending on the quality of its work force. There won’t be the necessary improvement without success in Cleveland, and Akron, for that matter. Thus, it was encouraging to see Democrats and Republicans rallying to the mayor’s plan during his visit to the Statehouse this week. Legislation must be approved to allow Jackson to move forward. Read More…