News

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DPS adjusts for $42 million cut in funding, The Denver Post

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Anticipating at least $42 million in state funding cuts for the next school year, Denver Public Schools administrators are calling for salary freezes, a reduction of 3.5 percent in every school budget and less money for special education.

No widespread teacher layoffs are expected for 2010-11, but targeted layoffs are likely, said David Suppes, DPS chief operating officer, in a presentation to the school board Wednesday.

"It's impossible to think at this level of cuts there won't be jobs lost," Suppes said.

Throughout the state, school districts are beginning difficult discussions about their budgets as Colorado faces its worst revenue downturn since the Great Depression.

Advocates push change in working conditions for isolated immigrant sheepherders, LAtimes.com

Thursday, January 14, 2010

WAMSUTTER, Wyo. (AP) — Alone and thousands of miles from home, the immigrant sheepherder roams some of the West's most desolate and frigid landscapes, tending a flock for as little as $600 a month without a day off on the horizon.

"You take it or leave it. You take it because the economy is worse at home," Pepe Cruz, a 40-year-old Peruvian, said in Spanish.

Cruz is one of hundreds of immigrants from South America, Mexico and Nepal who work as sheepherders in states like Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and California, and their brutal work conditions are getting increased attention these days.

Read the entire article here.

Poor treatment of immigrant sheep herders alleged, The Denver Post

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Immigrant sheepherders from South America working in western Colorado routinely are paid low wages and live in small campers without electricity or toilet facilities, according to a report to be released today.

However, officials with the sheep industry vehemently dispute the report's findings, calling them anecdotal and unsubstantiated.

The report by Colorado Legal Services was based on interviews over two years with 93 of the estimated 300 immigrant sheepherders working in the state under H-2A visas.

The workers, mostly from Peru, are brought in to work for up to three years herding sheep.

But there are few safeguards for the workers, the report said.

"A lot of the actual shocking stuff is allowed under current law," said Jennifer Lee, a Colorado Legal Services attorney who oversaw the report.

A 35-year-old replay on school suspensions - The Denver Post, Tina Griego

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

A quiz.

In what years were the following written:

A) "Racial gaps in suspensions — Black public-school students in Colorado are nearly three times as likely to face serious discipline as their white peers, a disparity that is persistently growing despite efforts to curb it. . . . Expressed as a rate, 18 of every 100 black students and 11 of 100 Latino students faced serious discipline, compared with 6.5 out of 100 white students."

B) "Minority school suspensions a shocker — Suspensions last year of more than 47,000 students, including disproportionate numbers of black and Hispanic males, have prompted educators and policymakers to ask why. Nearly half of all black males in Colorado's middle and high schools were suspended last year, along with nearly a third of Hispanic males and one in every six white males."

C) "Suspensions impact some children more than others. While the largest numbers of suspended children are white, proportionately suspensions hurt more children who are black, poor, older and male. Most striking is the disparate suspension of black schoolchildren. They are suspended at twice the rate of any other group."

Legislature opens 2010 session with dueling over budget, The Denver Post

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The 2010 Colorado legislative session opened today with speeches from leaders of both parties that presaged the showdown over the state budget expected to dominate the next four and a half months.

And there were glimpses of other potential hot-button issues to come, ranging from stricter regulations on payday loans to placing tougher limits on initiative referendums.

Three new DPS boardmembers talk charters, Westword

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The future of charter schools in Denver looked bright in 2009. Despite voting to close P.S. 1 and Skyland Community High School charter schools because of sub-par academics, the seven-member Denver Public Schools board approved six new ones. They include the expansion of two existing, high-performing charters, as well as a host of new schools, including a language-immersion school and an all-girls' school focused on athletics.

But what will happen with charters in 2010 is less clear. The board has three new members whose stated opinions on charter schools have yet to be tested, and their votes could throw off the balance of the board that approved so many charters last year.

Read the entire article here!