REPLAY: School Board Passes Budget
The Cobb County Board of Education approves the same three-furlough-day plan it rejected Thursday as three members change their votes.
Updated 3 p.m.
We covered the furlough days—the debate and the outcome—in the live blog and the comments, but let's lay it all out here as well.
Superintendent Michael Hinojosa's recommendation for the three-furlough-day budget included a calendar placing the furlough days Dec. 21, Feb. 15 and May 30.
The logic of those days:
- Dec. 21 extends winter break and gives district employees and school families an extra day to prepare for the holidays, travel, shop and so forth.
- Feb. 15 is the Friday before Presidents Day and turns that into a four-day weekend.
- May 30 is a teacher workday and sets the student school year up to end on the Thursday before Memorial Day, keeping this year's setup of graduations Thursday through Saturday, May 23 to 25.
David Banks, who represents East and Northeast Cobb, first proposed switching all the furlough days to Feb. 20 to 22, then cutting a day off the end of winter break and moving that vacation day to Feb. 19, creating a weeklong February break just like the former balanced calendar.
After a break in the meeting for the staff to work out the alternatives, Banks adjusted his proposal to use two of the furlough days in February, on the 14th and 15th, and to move one vacation day from the end of the winter holiday to Feb. 19, creating a six-day February break with the weekend.
Hinojosa did not recommend Banks' plan but said he could live with it.
It failed on a 4-3 vote, getting support from Banks, Eagle and Morgan voting yes. The original administration proposal then passed, 6-1, with Banks opposed.
Connie Jackson, the president of the Cobb County Association of Educators, sent out an email message this afternoon praising the budget and calendar votes.
"CCAE had advocated for a middle ground budget with only 3 furlough days and restoring the elementary media para-pros to full time. This is exactly what the board passed and CCAE considers it a major victory!" Jackson's message reads. "The School Board also consulted CCAE publicly when deciding where to place the 3 furlough days on the calendar for next year. CCAE has worked hard on this issue and is very pleased with the advocacy and the response by the school board."
Updated 9 a.m.
The Cobb school board has passed an $841.9 million budget on a 4-3 vote.
The board enacted Alternative C, the same budget it rejected on a 4-3 vote Thursday night. It uses three furlough days and a 177-day school year instead of the five furlough days the school district proposed.
The new fiscal 2013 budget also restore elementary school library paraprofessionals to full-time status.
Voting for the budget were Lynnda Eagle, David Banks, David Morgan and Scott Sweeney. Alison Bartlett, Tim Stultz and Kathleen Angelucci voted no.
On Thursday night, Banks and Morgan voted against the same budget, and Angelucci voted for it.
Original Report
The Cobb County Board of Education is meeting at 8:25 a.m. at the Central Office on Glover Street to discuss the fiscal 2013 Cobb County School District budget, which the board failed to pass at its meeting Thursday despite bouncing around five different versions.
Watch the live stream of the meeting and add your comments in the CoverItLive blog above or in the comment space below.
Nikola Tesla
9:37 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Glad they finally came to an agreement!
Mic I
9:45 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Where are the furlough days going on the calendar? I missed that part due to work. Thanks!!
Wendy Parker
9:48 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Mic I, I believe they're still discussing that, they're sorting through the calendar now. We'll update that information when they've made a decision.
Mic I
10:11 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
I caught the very end, though, and they approved 6-1 to approve the Superintendent's calendar recommendation, or was the 6-1 vote something else? I was taking phone calls for work and trying to listen sporadically. They shot down Bank's calendar proposal 2-5, then proposed to accept the Super's recommendation, and got a 6-1 vote for approval. I just didn't see what his recommendation was. BTW, thanks, Patch, for keeping us updated!
Michael Jacobs
10:36 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
The furlough days will be Dec. 21, Feb. 15 and May 30.
MLS
10:27 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Any word on if 350 jobs will be cut?
Michael Jacobs
10:41 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Yes, a reduction of 350 teaching jobs is part of the approved budget. Those jobs are still expected to be accounted for through attrition. And if attrition falls short of 350 jobs, it still appears that the administration would rather dip a little deeper into reserves than lay anyone off.
Mic I
10:42 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Thanks for the listing of the furlough days. Love this publication!!
Oldtimer
11:05 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
Is TFA still in the plan? I bet we have qualified, certified local teachers. These would cost less.
Kiri Walton
11:27 am on Monday, May 21, 2012
If TFA teachers are chosen, the additional fee for their ongoing training will not come from the CCSD budget, but from outside donors.
swampmedic89
12:27 pm on Monday, May 21, 2012
Would be shameful to lay off anyone and bring Teachers for America in.
Kiri Walton
1:57 pm on Monday, May 21, 2012
One of the stipulations the BOE required in order to bring TFA in is that no TFA teachers can displace current Cobb teachers.
Fred Farkel
11:52 am on Thursday, May 9, 2013
Anyone who claims to be an educator in this state is most likely shamed anyway. This entire system has been exposed for what it is. A political experiment on kids and a fleecing of the taxpayer. These people have no shame. Thats one of the biggest problems we face in society today. No morals, no values.
Jack S
4:37 pm on Tuesday, May 22, 2012
the vote switching was to call-in favors basically, trade "no votes" now for "yes votes" later; in particular votes related to TFA, the Harrison 9th grade center and STEM Charter Schools. It's all about politics and special interests groups and nothing about what is good for the community or the children. You can bet that none of the Board members have walked any of the halls of the schools they represent or visited an already over crowed class room before they (not all) voted to reduce teachers and add more students. At this rate, I think the calendar issue that won't die, will rear its ugly head once again.
Fred Farkel
11:50 am on Thursday, May 9, 2013
Every one of these so called Educators, School Board Members are nothing but megalomaniacs. They are just here to further their own personal agenda ( be it racial, monetary, or control issues). This is a sham, a joke and a complete travesty.
They should all resign and get back to work earning an honest living.
Fred Farkel
11:49 am on Thursday, May 9, 2013
There should be no budget. These schools should be closed. There should be a voucher program. These are nothing but political hacks making a name for themselves by doling out a substandard education to kids for political ends.
Complete joke.