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December 5, 2004

Superintendent Art Rainwater's recent comments on the Budget and the Reading First rejection

I recently received a copy of the minutes of the November 3, 2004 Superintendent's Faculty Committee meeting. During this meeting Superintendent Art Rainwater discusses a variety of topics, including the recent rejection of $2M in Reading First funds and the district's budget. The minutes are available in this 350K pdf document. Highlights:

On Declining Federal Funds: "This situation (declining federal funds) presents a dilemma for a Superintendent - not so much for me because I've done what I want to do and am looking at the end of my career. But for a young, career-building Superintendent in a struggling district it would be very hard to decide whether you accept desperately needed money and compromise program, or turn it down because you know you have something better."

"What was the reaction to the district saying no to federal money? I read a little about it in the newspaper. That was it - there was no other reaction."

on Reading First:
"The Reading 1st grants are designed to support schools where reading is an issue. Like everthing in NCLB, they are based on a relatively sound principle but farther down the line you find something insidious about that. . ."

On No Child Left Behind:
"By the year 2013, if we have one single student in the whole district who is not proficient or advanced in reading, math and science, then our district would be designated a failure. Much research has been done by a variety of educational associations. They show that, after six years, 80% of districts will be failing. When that is the goal, people don't take it seriously. An important part about making change is having attainable goals."

In response to a question on the budget,"Are we headed for another $10 million in budget cuts?" Art answered, "The best case, which I believe we are heading for, is between $6-7 million. The worst case would be if the Legislature passes a property tax freeze and the Governor can't veto it, which would result in somewhere between $15-17 million."

Posted by Jim Zellmer at December 5, 2004 5:42 PM
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