Hillsborough County – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Wed, 24 Aug 2022 21:09:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Hillsborough County – 社区黑料 32 32 DeSantis-Backed Candidates Rack Up School Board Wins Across Florida /article/desantis-backed-candidates-rack-up-school-board-wins-across-florida/ Wed, 24 Aug 2022 16:38:05 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=695410 Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis鈥檚 effort to fill local school board seats with candidates who embrace his conservative was mostly a success Tuesday night 鈥 even in some counties that lean to the left. 

Unofficial results show 19 of the 30 candidates he endorsed won their races. Six others are headed to runoffs in the general election on Nov. 8 and five were defeated.

鈥淲omen with kids are the swing vote in Florida,鈥 said Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida. DeSantis, she added, was 鈥渂rilliant鈥 in waiting until early voting was over Sunday to on behalf of his candidates. 鈥淗e knows that the majority of Republicans are going to vote on Election Day.鈥


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The majority of the governor鈥檚 favored candidates won in counties that voted for former President Trump in 2020, but some also picked up seats in Democratic strongholds. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e excited about the boards we flipped that now have a majority of parents鈥 rights members,鈥 said Tina Descovich, a co-founder of Moms for Liberty, a growing conservative organization that, like DeSantis, is opposed to schools鈥 attention to LGBTQ rights and social justice issues. 鈥淧arents know their children the best.鈥

In Miami-Dade, the state鈥檚 largest district, DeSantis-backed Monica Colucci, an educator who worked in the governor鈥檚 administration, defeated longtime incumbent Marta Perez. And Roberto Alonso, who founded an ed tech company and owns an adult day care, beat two other candidates, including Maribel Balbin, who was endorsed by the teachers union.

Balbin said she didn鈥檛 want Alonso to 鈥渨alk into a seat without at least having a challenge of some sort.鈥

In Duval County, which includes Jacksonville, April Carney 鈥 who was part of the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol 鈥 beat incumbent Elizabeth Andersen, a licensed mental health therapist. Carney, one of DeSantis鈥檚 candidates, has not confirmed whether she was at the Capitol that day.

鈥淚鈥檓 concerned for our teachers and students,鈥 Andersen told 社区黑料. She rejected political endorsements because she didn鈥檛 want the race to be partisan. 鈥淭his level of political involvement by the governor in a local race is unprecedented and un-American.鈥 

Campaign volunteers turned out as early voting began Aug. 16. Monica Colucci, endorsed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, defeated an incumbent on the school board in Miami-Dade. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

The primary was a chance to gauge how voters would respond to DeSantis鈥檚 anti-鈥漺oke鈥 education agenda. 

DeSantis has made a cornerstone of his re-election campaign. In November, he鈥檒l face U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, a Democrat and former governor who released his of school board preferences. But some education advocates viewed the endorsements from both candidates as unwelcome intrusion into nonpartisan races.

鈥淧arents don鈥檛 like it,鈥 said Melissa Erickson, executive director of the Alliance for Public Schools 鈥 an advocacy organization focusing on districts along the I-4 corridor, from Tampa (Hillsborough County) to Daytona Beach (Volusia County). 鈥淭hey want school board meetings to be boring again.鈥

In Hillsborough County, where Crist鈥檚 and DeSantis鈥檚 candidates went head-to-head, Erickson saw less of an impact. Incumbent Stacy Hahn, endorsed by DeSantis, was reelected, as was incumbent Karen Perez, who picked up Crist鈥檚 endorsement. Another DeSantis candidate, Patricia Rendon won an open seat. 

鈥淭wo incumbents are going back to the school board. People are voting for who they know,鈥 Erickson said. 鈥淣obody massively outperformed their demographic.鈥 

鈥楢 one-size-fits-all鈥 agenda

DeSantis unveiled his initial in June. After Crist announced his preferred candidates in July, DeSantis expanded his list to cover 18 districts. 

To earn the governor鈥檚 support, candidates had to complete a survey and commit to furthering his 10-point , which includes keeping 鈥渨oke gender ideology out of schools鈥 and rejecting critical race theory in the curriculum.

Andersen, in Duval, said the pledge runs counter to the principle of local control in education. 

鈥淭o me that鈥檚 a one-size-fit-all education agenda,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are not the same as Hillsborough or Miami. We want to make decisions that work for our schools and our kids.鈥

But she represents a more conservative, mostly white part of the county. Carney won 53% of the vote.

With the Florida governor expected to seek the Republican nomination for president in 2024, the question is whether his education platform translates outside of Florida as well. He recently took his message to Arizona, Pennsylvania and Ohio, for Republican candidates. Republican Doug Mastriano, running for Pennsylvania governor, said he wanted to make his state the

鈥淢any people have moved to Florida because of what we鈥檝e done,鈥 said Alysha Legge, who lost to incumbent Perez in Hillsborough. She pointed to above-average and keeping schools open during the pandemic as reasons contributing to the state鈥檚 growth. 鈥淚 honestly would love for him to stay in Florida. We need him a little longer.鈥

and changing demographics have shifted the state in a . Part of that growth includes an influx of Cubans. While they tend to lean more Republican, , some experts on Florida politics said that doesn鈥檛 mean they are as far to the right as DeSantis and former President Donald Trump. 

鈥嬧嬧滺ispanics are more in the center. They鈥檙e trying to figure out what U.S. politics are all about,鈥 said Marcos Vilar, executive director of , a nonprofit that has worked to get Hispanic candidates elected to school boards. 

Vilar was more focused on races in Orange County, which has a large Hispanic population. DeSantis didn鈥檛 endorse anyone in those races, but there were still contests between conservative and more liberal candidates. 

, incumbents Teresa Jacobs and Angie Gallo fended off conservative challengers, but Alicia Farrant, part of Moms for Liberty, will face Michael Daniels in a runoff. Many of DeSantis鈥檚 picks also received backing from the , a conservative group focused on removing any influence of critical race theory over K-12 curriculum.

In Manatee County, just south of the Tampa area, Sean Conley challenged DeSantis-backed incumbent Chad Choate. Although he鈥檚 a Republican 鈥 supporting for-profit charter schools, tighter security and fiscal responsibility 鈥 Conley said he knew it would be difficult to win. Even the chairman of the local Republican party got involved in the race. urging members in an Aug.18 email to be 鈥渓aser-focused鈥 on winning the seats for DeSantis鈥檚 candidates. 

Rev. James Golden, another Manatee County board member who ran for re-election is a local leader in the Democratic party. But he said he has 鈥渟crupulously鈥 avoided partisanship in his role as a board member. 

With voters last fall renewing a for the school district, Golden thought that was a good sign they would vote him in for another term. But challenger Richard Tatem earned just enough votes to avoid a runoff.

The governor, Golden said, is 鈥渢earing down the fundamental premise behind public education.鈥 Teachers, he added, shouldn鈥檛 have to worry about 鈥渨hose mama is a Democrat and whose daddy is a Republican.鈥

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Parents Want Better School Ventilation this Fall, But Costs May Be Too High /article/parents-want-better-school-ventilation-this-fall-but-the-devil-is-in-the-details-and-the-expense/ Mon, 12 Jul 2021 16:59:43 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=574410 Get essential education news and commentary delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up here for 社区黑料鈥檚 daily newsletter.

Last August, when Florida鈥檚 Hillsborough County Public Schools began upgrading air filters in their K-12 buildings, the event was so significant that to document one of the first installations, at a Tampa elementary school.

When RAND Corp. researchers last spring with a list of 13 items that would make them feel safe about in-person schooling this fall, parents鈥 top priority wasn鈥檛 teacher or student vaccines, social distancing or regular COVID testing.

It was ventilation.

Perhaps that鈥檚 because COVID-19 has made our most basic act 鈥 breathing 鈥 newsworthy.

But therein lies the problem: In 2021, with an airborne virus still infecting Americans at a rate of , the heating and cooling systems in many U.S. public schools are nothing short of awful. Whether billions in new federal aid will be enough to help school districts upgrade an aging system anytime soon remains an open question.

While data on the scope of the problem are scarce, what little there are suggest that schools are looking at billions of dollars in deferred maintenance. A few examples:

  • In Worcester, Mass., the district last summer said it would spend to upgrade heating and cooling systems in its 44 schools, some of which date back to the 1800s. Nearly half of its schools were built before 1940;
  • In Denver, the school board spending $4.9 million to upgrade school heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems in more than 150 buildings after former Superintendent Susana Cordova said parents had been asking her specifically about HVAC upgrades.

Like many issues, this one hits low-income students hardest.

In a of school facilities by the National Center for Education Statistics and Westat, researchers found that schools serving the largest percentage of low-income students also had the largest percentage of air ventilation/filtration systems rated 鈥渇air or poor鈥 in permanent buildings.

The study found that in schools with the highest concentration of low-income students, 33 percent had such troubled systems. In schools with the lowest concentration, it was 27 percent.

In the RAND survey, nearly three in four parents put school air quality at the top of their school wishlist. Even among a subgroup of parents who were unsure whether they鈥檇 even send their kids back to school, ventilation came in as the most important safety indicator.

The dilemma is resonating beyond parents: Last fall, the non-profit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), with the New York State Labor Department on behalf of 44 employees in nine public school campuses across New York City, saying most school buildings were improperly ventilated. It also said the city鈥檚 鈥渕inimalistic鈥 ventilation standards don鈥檛 prevent the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19. The group wants inspectors to determine whether schools are ventilated and filtrated to adequately protect teachers, students, and staff.

Kyla Bennett, the group鈥檚 New England director, said the conditions in these schools were 鈥減retty horrifying.鈥

鈥淭he inspections that they had done, most of the schools did not have windows that opened (in) the classrooms. They didn鈥檛 have the correct supply ventilation or exhaust ventilation in the rooms. I mean, some of them literally had zero ventilation.鈥

An environmental group last fall sued the New York City school district, saying most buildings were inadequately ventilated. But a district spokesman said only well-ventilated classrooms were in use, and that the city鈥檚 public schools 鈥渨ere some of the safest places to be during this pandemic.鈥 (@NYCSchools / Twitter)

She understands why windows in some cases don鈥檛 open. 鈥淭here鈥檚 noise out there. There鈥檚 pollution. …There’s danger, especially for small children, if the windows open wide enough. But the bottom line is that in order to make the schools safe for not just the students, but for the staff and the teachers, we need to improve the ventilation in the schools.鈥

Nathaniel Styer, a city schools spokesperson, said the district鈥檚 public schools 鈥渨ere some of the safest places to be during this pandemic because of our focus on ventilation and safety. We ended the year with a .03 percent positivity rate, which never went above 1 percent and was consistently far below the city average. Our schools are safe and if any repairs need to be made to ventilation systems the impacted classrooms are closed until the problem is fixed.鈥

Styer said the district only uses classrooms in which ventilation systems are working and operational, with the means to bring fresh air inside, circulate it, and ventilate the air outside. He also said every room was inspected multiple times by professional engineers and union inspectors.

The high costs of building repairs 鈥 as well as other priorities and the political gridlock gripping Washington, D.C. 鈥 likely mean that most families won鈥檛 get their school ventilation wishes granted by the time students return this fall.

Last December鈥檚 Covid-19 stimulus measure, as well as President 叠颈诲别苍鈥檚 proposed infrastructure legislation, could change conditions in schools. The stimulus includes $54.3 billion for states and school districts to shore up school facilities, including HVAC systems. But schools鈥 total price tag could be billions more, recent estimates suggest.

叠颈诲别苍鈥檚 could help as well. It proposes $50 billion in direct grants and another $50 billion leveraged through bonds to upgrade and build public schools. While its fate remains up in the air, a bipartisan group of congressional lawmakers last week of the proposal. A summary of the 鈥淩ebuilding America鈥檚 Infrastructure鈥 plan by the Problem Solvers Caucus endorses upgrading schools鈥 internet systems, but school ventilation.

Needed: $1 million 鈥 or more 鈥 per building

Much of what we know about school infrastructure these days comes from a 2020 study by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, which and found that 54 percent needed to update or replace 鈥渕ultiple building systems鈥 including HVAC. An estimated one in three schools needed to update their systems, it found. And 41 percent of districts needed to update or replace HVAC systems in at least half of their schools, totaling about 36,000 nationwide.

The price tag for upgrading these systems: about $1 million per building. If half of the 36,000 buildings get upgrades and the rest get entirely new HVAC systems, it could cost schools about $72 billion, the non-profit Learning Policy Institute .

The U.S. Government Accountability Office surveyed school districts and found that 54 percent needed to update or replace 鈥渕ultiple building systems鈥 including HVAC. About 41 percent of districts needed to update or replace HVAC systems in at least half of their schools. (GAO)

Among educators themselves, the problem is hardly hidden 鈥 actually, most of them would agree with RAND鈥檚 findings, calling ventilation an urgent problem. When the American Society of Civil Engineers earlier this year graded infrastructure systems nationwide, ventilation upgrades topped schools鈥 most pressing concerns. More than half of districts 鈥 53 percent 鈥 reported that they need to update or replace multiple building systems, including HVAC. The report estimated that schools need a in repairs. Taxpayers are currently investing only $490 billion, the group said, leaving a $380 billion shortfall.

While the engineers鈥 group gave the nation鈥檚 overall infrastructure a , it was even tougher on our public schools, handing them a .

It noted that in the decade between fiscal years 2008 and 2017, state capital funding for schools fell 31 percent, the equivalent of a $20 billion cut. In that period, 38 states cut school capital spending as a share of the state economy.

One of the report鈥檚 authors, California civil engineer Dan Cronquist, said in an interview that HVAC upgrades and replacements topped all other school officials鈥 concerns, including roofing, lighting, safety, plumbing, and even asbestos, lead, and mold remediation.

Air quality, he said, is 鈥渁 big issue,鈥 but he acknowledged that educators have a lot on their plates. 鈥淪chool buildings are not as a high-priority in some districts as other expenses.鈥

When GAO researchers visited school districts in six states last year, they found that security 鈥渉ad become a top priority,鈥 often taking precedence over spending on building systems such as HVAC. It also found that in about half of districts nationwide, funding for school facilities came primarily from local sources such as property taxes.

In most cases, schools can鈥檛 rely on federal funding for ongoing, needed repairs, unless they鈥檙e located on military bases, receive federal Impact Aid, or are charter schools.

Upgrades don鈥檛 necessarily mean better air quality

suggest that schools use 鈥渕ultiple mitigation strategies鈥 to lower the risk of exposure, such as improving building ventilation, as well as masks and distancing. While most buildings won鈥檛 actually require new ventilation systems, CDC says, upgrades or improvements 鈥渃an increase the delivery of clean air and dilute potential contaminants.鈥 In buildings that are already up to code, it suggests using window fans, improving filtration, and using portable high-efficiency particulate air filtration systems, among other measures.

Even if they get upgrades, schools may not automatically enjoy better air quality if they don鈥檛 maintain and operate the systems properly.

A Maryland classroom from a 2020 GAO report on school infrastructure. The school doesn鈥檛 have air conditioning in most areas and the school district must close the building if temperatures rise beyond a safe level. (GAO)

In a study , before the pandemic hit, researchers from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California, Davis, visited 104 California classrooms that had recently been retrofitted with new HVAC units. About half had high CO2 concentrations, researchers found, and many were 鈥渦nder-ventilated,鈥 likely due to improperly selected equipment, poor maintenance, or other issues.

The researchers concluded that better oversight of HVAC installation, as well as periodic testing and CO2聽monitoring, would improve ventilation.

As for conditions in New York City schools, the PEER complaint is on hold after the state Public Employee Safety and Health Bureau said it didn鈥檛 have jurisdiction over COVID-19 cases, Bennett said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking at our options, but there鈥檚 no quick solution here.鈥

She added, 鈥淭he bottom line is that this pandemic, this isn鈥檛 the end. This is something that鈥檚 going to be hanging over our heads 鈥 whether it鈥檚 COVID-19, that still hasn’t gone away, or whether it鈥檚 the next pandemic 鈥 we need to make sure that the ventilation in our schools is better than it is, because it鈥檚 not a safe working environment.鈥

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