Cupertino Education Association

Cupertino Education Association

June 2010 Archives


Fiscal Report
Copyright © 2010 School Services of California, Inc.
Volume 30                       For Publication Date: July 2, 2010                           No. 13
Initiative to Lower the Threshold for Passage of Educational Parcel Taxes Fails to Qualify for Ballot

The Secretary of State's Office is expected to announce this week that the initiative known as the Local Classrooms for Local Funding Act failed to qualify for the November ballot. The initiative would have changed the voter threshold for passing a parcel tax from the current two-thirds to 55% when certain accountability requirements were satisfied. The proponents' website,http://www.improvedschoolfunding.com, already reflects the initiative's failure, but assures supporters that the commitment, time, and money that they put into the effort to qualify the initiative helped build a grassroots coalition that is working to support quality public education.

Because the initiative would have amended the State Constitution, proponents needed the signatures of 694,354 registered voters--8% of the total votes cast for Governor in the last gubernatorial election--to qualify. The circulation deadline was May 28, 2010. Proponents were unable to secure the funding required--probably at least $1 million--to gather those signatures, leading to the measure's defeat.

A similar legislative effort to reduce the vote threshold for passage of a parcel tax to 55%, State Constitutional Amendment (SCA) 6 (Simitian, D-Palo Alto), has been stalled on the Senate floor since June 2009 because it would require a two-thirds vote of the Legislature to pass.

--Deborah Harmon


LEG ALERT June 30th

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CTA NEWS FOR JUNE

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CTA President Update

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June 21, 2010

Campaign 2010 Off to a Good Start

Voters Reject Romero Reform Agenda

CTA‐supported candidates and school measures scored big wins in the June Primary Election. California voters soundly rejected the top-down education reform agenda of State Senator Gloria Romero as they voted for CTA-supported Tom Torlakson and former superintendent Larry Aceves to advance to the November election for Superintendent of Public Instruction.

It was a vote against the state budget cuts, the one-size-fits-all mandates of Sacramento and Washington and the blame game against teachers. Despite strong backing from wealthy charter school advocates, Romero ran third all night long. It shows once again, that voters want education reform that focuses on proven solutions and on parents, teachers and administrators working together to best meet the needs of students in local neighborhood schools. They want smaller class sizes and a well-rounded education for their kids that goes beyond test scores.

CTA led an independent expenditure campaign for Torlakson, a former classroom teacher and coach, which included statewide radio ads and direct mail to voters. In addition, 96 percent of CTA's recommended candidates for Congress and the State Legislature won.

In addition, the commitment cards will be part of CTA's Chapter Presidents Lobby Day set for May 25. It's important that we have local presidents from across the state attend. Please register at www.regonline.com/2010/CTAPRESLOBBYDAY.

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Brown Addresses Council
CTA gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown received an enthusiastic welcome from State Council delegates earlier this month. Brown told the cheering crowd that he would "mobilize the people of this state" behind public education to achieve a better future for all of us. Brown said, "When we invest in our people and in our schools, when we pull together, then we know that we don't just defend the land of our fathers - we defend and protect the land of our children. That's the future, that's our future, and together we're going to take back California." Hear more on CTA's Fan Page on Facebook.

CTA Initiative Awaits Ballot
Meeting the required deadline, CTA turned in more than 800,000 signatures to qualify the Repeal Corporate Tax Loopholes Act for the November ballot. The initiative would rescind more than $2 billion in tax breaks handed out to big corporations last year without any requirements to create new jobs. In these tough economic times with public schools and colleges being cut more than $17 billion, everyone should be paying their fair share. County election offices are counting petition signatures right now.

Assembly Jobs Budget Truly Protects Education

For the last two years, politicians have done a lot of talking about how they are "protecting" public education. All that protection has meant billions in budget cuts and higher student fees. Finally, Assembly Speaker John Pérez has proposed the California Jobs Budget that really does prevent further cuts from education and actually funds our schools at nearly $6 billion more than the governor's May revised budget plan. CTA, the California Faculty Association and the entire Education Coalition are supporting the Assembly's Jobs Budget as it restores critical funding for children and creates or restores more than 465,000 jobs in California. Be sure and e-mail your lawmaker today to support the California Jobs Budget.

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Common Core Standards Commission Starts Work

After months of waiting for all the appointments to be made, the Academic Content Standards Commission has begun its work of trying to revamp California's K-12 standards in math and English language arts to come in line with the national common core standards developed by the National Governor's Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers. Senate Bill x5-1 requires California to adopt 85 percent of the common core standards. The Commission has 21 representatives appointed by the Governor, Assembly and Senate. Twelve of the Commission representatives are CTA members; four of them were nominated by CTA.
Aligning California's rigorous academic standards to the Common Core may not be easy - especially in math. California's math standards are organized by grade and course. The Common Core math standards are organized by conceptual category and don't push students to take Algebra in 8th grade.

The Commission has a very short timeline - until August 2 - to complete its work. In contrast, when California designed its current standards, the panel had more than two years to debate and come to agreement. It took another ten years and more than $2 billion to then align all tests, textbooks, curriculum and professional development to the standards. This shift to the Common Core means all that work will have to start over.

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Getting Ready for the NEA RA

The 148th annual NEA Representative Assembly will convene in New Orleans over the July 4th weekend. About 10,000 delegates from across the country, including 1,200 from California will debate policy changes and hundreds of new business items over the four-day convention. The re-authorization of ESEA, Race to the Top and federal jobs bill are expected to be the main issues discussed.

The re-authorization of ESEA appears to be somewhat up in the air right now. The White House is pushing for re-authorization before the fall break, but some members of Congress are now expressing concerns about the four limited reform ideas to help lower-performing schools outlined in the Administration's Blueprint.

The federal jobs bill is also stalled right now in the House. This measure would bring more than $2.8 billion to California and restore up to 300,000 education jobs nationwide. Call your member of Congress today at 1-866-608-8355 or e-mail.

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CTA Summer Conferences

Take a well-deserved break over the next few weeks and then sign up for CTA's Summer Conferences. The 55th annual Presidents Conference runs July 19-23 at Asilomar in Pacific Grove. If you are a new or returning president, this conference is a must. And then in August, it's the CTA Summer Institute which includes various trainings for CTA leaders and activists. The week-long sessions include bargaining, school finance, communications, professional development, member benefits, healthcare and legal support. Ethnic minority, small chapter and other incentive grants are available. Register online at www.CTA.org.

In addition, in this election year, CTA is offering a Northern and Southern Campaign Universities. The Northern University is set for July 27-31 in Sacramento. The Southern University is scheduled for August 3-7 in Manhattan Beach. Both schools will offer hands-on experience to assist you and your chapter win local school board races and CTA-supported initiatives and candidates.

CTA LEG ALERT 6/21/10

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Please check the June 18th Cupertino Courier, Sunnyvale Sun and the Saratoga News for CEA's advertisement :) If you do not receive those here it is:


Calendar for 2010-2011

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Election results

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Greetings, congratulations and heartfelt thanks to you, your members and staff for all of your hard work and hard-fought victories in this election.  I recognize that there were a lot of local issues and battles taking place in your areas and school districts building to the election.  Yet you carved out the time to help send pro-public education candidates to the general election in November and pass local bond measures in many areas to counter the devastating effects of billions of dollars in cuts to our schools and students.
 
Thanks to your hard work, Assembly Member Tom Torlakson beat out Senator Gloria Romero in the race for state superintendent of public instruction, and now heads for a runoff election with former school superintendent Larry Aceves.  Voters spoke loud and clear that they want real educators who support proven reforms, know what's going on in our classrooms and support collaboration between parents, educators and administrators making decisions about public schools.
 
With your help, voters showed their strong support for public education by electing local pro-public education candidates and passing local bond measures and parcel taxes to support students and schools. 
 
Barbara Boxer, U.S. Senator
Jerry Brown, Governor
Gavin Newsom, Lieutenant Governor
Debra Bowen, Secretary of State
John Chiang, Controller   
Bill Lockyer, Treasurer
Dave Jones, Insurance Commissioner
Betty Yee, Board of Equalization, District 1
Chris Parker, Board of Equalization, District 2
Jerome Horton, Board of Equalization, District 4
 
Click here for a complete list of updates on initiatives and other races and www.cta.org for local bond measures. 
 
This primary election was our first step toward victory for our students and schools, but we have a tough fight facing us in November, and it is going to take all of us working together to be successful.  You will be hearing more from me in the coming months as we embark upon a campaign to secure victory for public schools and the future of California in November! 
 
Again, thank you and have a great summer.
 
David A. Sanchez
President
 
Dear CUSD parents,
 
I will be attending the city council meeting.  The more people we can have attend then the better.  I need your help to get as many parents a possible to attend the meeting so please forward this email. The timing for the comments on this would be start at around 7:50pm.  A few parents could speak and the rest could stand behind the speakers in support. 
 
The Cupertino City Council budget hearing will be

Wednesday, June 9

starting at 7:50pm to about 10pm

at Cupertino Community Hall

10350 Torre Ave.    

 

Please do the following

1.  Attend the Cupertino City Council meeting and speak stating that you are a Cupertino Union School District Parent or stand in support of the parent speaker

 

2.  If you cannot attend then email encouraging friends to attend the Cupertino City Council meeting

 

3.  If you cannot attend then email by Wednesdy morning the Cupertino City Council members

http://www.cupertino.org/index.aspx?page=41

 

Kris Wang:  kwang@cupertino.org

Gilbert Wong:  gwong@cupertino.org

Orrin Mahoney:  omahoney@cupertino.org

Mark Santoro:  msantoro@cupertino.org

Barry Chang:  bchang@cupertino.org

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The Cupertino Union School District schools are having to struggle with unprecedented state cuts in which over $9.9 million in funding cuts is on-going and will repeat year after year. The layoff of over 100 teachers and increase of primary grade class size by 50% was prevented for this year with private donations and the contribution of furloughs from all the employees of the district.  The following year, we could face the same problem.  In these times of tight budgets, it would be good for the school district to have partners.
 
Some ideas would be for City of Cupertino through the Park and Recreation Department to work in partnership with the school district on science educational programs.
  • expand the science educational facilities of the McClellan Ranch:  environmental classroom,  the legacy farm at Stocklmeir property, mini-grants so that teachers can implement programs about the environmental studies and life sciences.

The children of today will be the invertors, the scientists, and the entrepreneurs of tomorrow.  When we as a community in partnership with the school district support science and technology programs in our schools, we are investing in our future. With this investment, Cupertino will continue to benefit from local businesses tax revenue because these businesses will have the expertise that will keep them at the forefront of technology and innovation. In the near term, investing in our schools keeps our property values high and high property values brings more tax revenues for the city.   It makes our schools and our community highly desirable.

 

Examples of programs that are working well between the city and the school district are the crossing guards and programs that educate families and children about the benefits of walking to school.  When children and families walk to school this saves gas, reduces congestion about the schools, and is healthy for children.

 
I wanted to bring to your attention a June 3 online Mercury News article about the Cupertino City Budget.

http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_15223511

 

The article quotes Carol Atwood, who is the Cupertino city director of administrative services

"...Cupertino has also been fortunate to not see a decline in residential home values due to the popularity of the high-performing schools in the area, Atwood said..."

 

The article says further that

"...The city is heavily dependent on Apple Inc., Hewlett-Packard and Insight ...[which are all high technology companies]... for its sales tax, as the three companies account for 57 percent of such revenue..."

 

The article talks about major Cupertino City capital projects that include

" ...possible temporary dog park along Mary Avenue , ... fixing the dormant ponds at Linda Vista Park

 

At the June 1st Cupertino City Council Meeting, the estimated cost for a temporary dog park along Mary Avenue was $225,000.  At the meeting, a resident who lives near the proposed dog park was against the proposed park because of the potential litter, extra noise, and the hope that the city could find a better use for the public funds.

 

At the June 3rd Parks & Recreation Commission Meeting, the estimated cost partial cost for fixing the dormant ponds at Linda Vista park was  $450,000.  In future years, you would need to pay in addition for the remainder of the cost and for the maintainance of the pond and the equipment to pump water into the ponds.  Currently, people can still enjoy the park without the ponds.

 

The temporary dog park and fixing the Linda Vista Park pond will likely help a small sector of the community.  However, there are about 18,000 students in the Cupertino Union School District who could benefit from science programs. Investing in science programs and partnering with schools in our community for the children of this community is a good investment for now and for the future of the Cupertino. It helps education which keeps our property values high and nurtures our high technology businesses' workforce for the future so that these businesses can continue to generate tax revenues for the city.

 

Regards,

-Linda





Open Transfer List

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Here is the open transfer list. Remember that these will be filled by June 30th and you will need to get an application from the district to apply. vacancylist1011.pdf