logo
MLSD board determines no civil rights infringement

MLSD board determines no civil rights infringement

Yahoo26-02-2025
Feb. 26—MOSES LAKE — In the Feb. 20 meeting of the Moses Lake School Board, the issue of equity in physical education resurfaced, spurred by a civil rights complaint submitted by Larry Dagnon, a teacher at North Elementary which he presented at the previous Feb. 6 meeting.
The complaint claims the district has disproportionately impacted minority students with reduced physical education resources.
"I cannot stress to you enough the impact that the discrimination has on the kids," Dagnon said. "They are sad; they want things to go back to normal. When I was listening to the student representatives hearing kids want school to go back to normal ... What gets kids to school? PE is one of the big ones."
School board member Ryan Coulston made a motion saying no civil right violations have taken place. School board vice-chair Carla Urias seconded the motion. The motion passed unanimously by the board.
During the Feb. 6 board meeting, Dagnon presented his concerns regarding the allocation of physical education teachers across the district's 11 elementary schools.
According to previous meetings from the Moses Lake School District, Garden Heights Elementary, Lakeview Elementary, Larson Heights Elementary and North Elementary all receive one 30-minute period once a week for physical education.
Other schools are on a weekly ABC rotation, meaning they have gym every third day, resulting in some weeks where students get PE once a week and some weeks they get it twice a week. Groff Elementary has PE once or twice a week for either 30 or 35 minutes. Longview Elementary gets one or two 40-minute gym sessions. Park Orchard Elementary and Peninsula Elementary get one or two 30-minute sessions a week. Sage Point Elementary gets one to two 40-to-45-minute sessions a week.
Knolls Vista Elementary gets two physical education periods weekly for 30 minutes. Then, Midway Elementary gets two or three sessions of 35 minutes each, depending on the semester.
According to RCW 28A.230.040, students in elementary schools must receive at least 100 minutes of physical education every week. However, right now, the only school within MLSD that is fulfilling that requirement is Midway Elementary for one of its two semesters.
With budget cuts caused by the district's recent financial crisis, there are only seven full-time elementary school physical education teachers. Four of the elementary schools share two PE teachers. Garden Heights and Lakeview share a teacher. North Elementary and Larson Height Elementary share another teacher.
"What that looks like right now is in our school, you could have as many as 35 minutes a week, but a lot of the time it's zero minutes," Dagnon said during the Feb. 6 meeting. "My own classroom has only had it once a month where they've had PE. You're supposed to have 100 minutes per week."
He said students in schools with mostly-minority populations are the ones most affected by the situation, causing unfair treatment of those students. Those campuses include North and Larson Heights which have a high percentage of minority students.
Dagnon accused the school district of using misleading data to downplay the issue, saying the district's response failed to accurately reflect the racial composition and needs of the affected schools. He said the district presented percentages of minority populations at various schools without giving a complete picture of how these populations are impacted by reduced programming.
"When I got a response from the district, you had pulled up the percentage of minority population for the entire schools of the elementaries," Dagnon said. "That doesn't show in an honest way really what's happening."
In response to the complaint, Michelle Musso, the district's HR director and civil rights coordinator, expressed appreciation for Dagnon's concerns but defended the district's actions.
"I also want to state that as a district we have repeatedly said we understand that reduced PE programming is not equitable across schools. We are clear and we know that," Musso said.
However, she maintained that the data analysis concluded no formal discrimination occurred.
"White students are receiving 81,812 minutes of PE programming per year, and minority students are receiving 79,799 minutes... The difference of 13 minutes annually is not significant and does not indicate discrimination," she said.
A critical point of contention was the methodology used to measure the impact of the cuts. Dagnon said that the analysis overlooked the realities faced by students in schools with significant minority populations.
He said a redistribution model could more equitably allocate PE resources based on need, arguing that "this is discrimination, and there's no other way to look at it."
During the meeting, board members sought clarity on the factors influencing the district's decision to limit PE resources at certain schools.
MLSD Superintendent Carol Lewis said the decisions were made based on a combination of school size, available resources and staff availability.
"We had to allocate the resources as best we could... The decision was made to keep full-time counselors at all of those schools," Lewis said, indicating that resource distribution was complicated by budgetary constraints. She also noted that if counselors had been let go to keep PE teachers, the conversation would be about a lack of counsellors instead.
During the Feb. 20 board meeting, community members expressed concerns about access to PE or lack thereof.
Andrea Carrillo, a parent health advocate, said, "Denying equitable access to PE is yet another example of how our most vulnerable students are left behind."
Guadalupe Collazo, another community member, echoed similar sentiments, highlighting that existing disparities reflect a broader inequity in the district's treatment of minority students.
When asked whether changing the current scheduling to address these inequities would be feasible mid-year, principals expressed concern over the potential impacts on other programs and services, especially for students with disabilities.
"Changing the schedule in March changes life skills schedules... It would change literally every teacher's schedule," explained one principal during the meeting, stressing the logistical challenges that such a move could entail.
As of now, according to MLSD Director of Public Relations Ryan Shannon, the district has passed the resolution saying no civil rights violations have taken place with no planned action in the future. However, Shannon said that if those who filed the specific civil rights complaint wish to continue, they could bring the cause directly to the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction for further investigation. Shannon said he is unaware of that action taking place.
"In some schools, they have more, in some schools, they have less, and we have presented that extensively to the board," Lewis said. "We've talked about it quite a lot, and that's one of the very first things that we want to fix if we have levy money and even if we don't have levy money, we need to even it out across our district. ... We know we will do that going forward into the next school year, one way or another."
PE time by campus:
Amount of physical education time each school receives weekly according to MLSD:
Washington State Requirement: 100 to 150 minutes
Garden Heights Elementary: 30 minutes
Groff Elementary: 30 to 70 minutes
Knolls Vista Elementary: 60 minutes
Lakeview Elementary: 30 minutes
Larson Heights Elementary: 30 minutes
Longview Elementary: 40 to 80 minutes
Midway Elementary: 70 to 105 minutes
North Elementary: 30 minutes
Park Orchard Elementary: 35 to 70 minutes
Peninsula Elementary: 30 to 60 minutes
Sage Point Elementary: 40 to 90 minutes
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How much have Wichita school board candidates raised for their campaigns?
How much have Wichita school board candidates raised for their campaigns?

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

How much have Wichita school board candidates raised for their campaigns?

Candidates for Wichita school board have raised modest contributions ahead of the Aug. 5 primary, though a few are pulling ahead of the competition in donations, according to disclosure forms the candidates turned in this week. Candidates in voting Districts 1 and 5 will vie for the two finalist slots in each of their primaries. Districts 2 and 6 did not have primaries and will be up for election in November. District 1 incumbent Diane Albert is outraising her challengers by thousands. She's raised more than $7,200 as of July 28. By comparison, first-time candidate Mackenzi Truelove raised about $1,195 including $100 from herself. The two other District 1 candidates, Sarah McMillen and Kyle Wiseman, both filed for exemptions, certifying that they would not spend more than $1,000 on their campaigns. In District 5, challenger Amy Jensen raised over $4,944. Incumbent Kathy Bond raised $3,799, including about $370 from herself and her husband. The three other District 5 candidates — Michelle Cunningham, Caleb Smith and Philip Samuels — filed for exemptions. In District 2, incumbent Julie Hedrick has raised about $7,400 so far, including $1,000 donations from local business owners and retirees. Brent Davis raised $4,952, likewise largely in $1,000 donations from retirees and professionals. Valerie Most filed for an exemption. In District 6, Amy Warren took in the most contributions of any candidate with $9,878, though this did include a $1,000 initial contribution by Warren and her husband. Warren's contributions were mostly donations of $500, many from individuals whose occupations were not listed on the form. District 6 incumbent Hazel Stabler has raised $3,000 so far, with a couple of $1,000 donations.. Voters can only vote for the candidate in the USD 259 district where they live. You can find maps of the voting districts here. Election Day is Tuesday. Solve the daily Crossword

Florida parent demands resignation of school board chair who celebrated Hulk Hogan's death
Florida parent demands resignation of school board chair who celebrated Hulk Hogan's death

Fox News

time3 days ago

  • Fox News

Florida parent demands resignation of school board chair who celebrated Hulk Hogan's death

One parent is demanding that a Florida county school board chair resign following comments in which she appeared to praise Hulk Hogan's death as "one less MAGA" in the world. Florida parent Jeremy Clepper told Fox News Digital in a statement that Sarah Rockwell, chair of Alachua County Public Schools, "needs to resign because of her comment 'good, one less MAGA in the world,' saying she wants all MAGAs dead." In since-deleted social media posts, Rockwell, who was elected in 2022, said, "Oh did Hulk die? I didn't even know. Good. One less MAGA in the world." Hogan, whose real name is Terry Bollea, died July 24 at age 71 after suffering cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida. In a reply to her initial comment, Rockwell added, "[H]e worked with the McMahons to union bust professional wrestling. [H]e's never been a good guy. I feel absolutely nothing about his death." Rockwell is "an extreme progressive at the head of our school board and clearly doesn't have the mental capacity to treat all families equally and keep our children safe," Clepper said. Clepper, who spoke Thursday at an Alachua County Public Schools school board meeting, said Rockwell should resign, calling her a "disgusting, vile human being." He said that he was "initially removed" from the meeting but that the environment became so hostile that he ended up leaving. Clepper told Fox News Digital that he has an elementary school child in the Alachua County Public Schools system, and that it is "absolutely terrifying that someone like her is at the head of the system." Following her comments that went viral on social media, Rockwell deleted the messages and apologized for them on her official school board Facebook account. "A few days ago, I made a cruel and flippant comment from my personal Facebook account on a friend's post regarding the death of Hulk Hogan," she wrote on Saturday. "I deeply regret making that comment and have since removed it. I want to make it very clear that I never have and never will wish harm on anyone regardless of whether we share political views. While I strongly disagree with some of the comments Hulk Hogan made, that is no excuse for my comment." Rockwell added, "I also sincerely apologize for the way my comment has eroded confidence in my ability to represent all students, families, and staff in Alachua County. I want to assure all of you that the best interests of our children and our public schools are at the center of everything I do as a board member. I hope I have shown that by my record of advocacy for children, families, and staff members throughout Alachua County. Again, I apologize for the hurt and distrust I have caused with my insensitive comment. I will continue to do the hard work of putting our children and schools first. I hope that I can earn back your trust." "There is absolutely no excuse for what I said and I take full responsibility for it," Rockwell said. "I posted an immediate apology on my professional Facebook page, and again tonight I sincerely and publicly apologize to everyone who was hurt or offended by my words." Fox News Digital reached out to Rockwell and the Alachua County Public Schools for comment.

Elections 2025: Here are Bergen County's contested November school board races
Elections 2025: Here are Bergen County's contested November school board races

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Elections 2025: Here are Bergen County's contested November school board races

Hundreds of candidates filed this month to run for seats on their local school boards in November. The school elections, all held in April until 2012, are now mostly held in November following a change in state law that allowed districts to switch. There are about 16 districts that continue to hold elections in April. The law that allowed November elections also changed the process for approving budgets. Districts no longer had to seek public approval to adopt budgets, only if the budget exceeded the then-new state-mandated 2% cap on increases. Story continues below photo gallery. There will be 30 contested school board races in Bergen County in November, where state voters will also elect their new governor as Democrat Mikie Sherrill and Republican Jack Ciattarelli face off. There are contested races in Bogota, Carlstadt, Edgewater (full terms and a one-year expired term), Emerson, Englewood, Fair Lawn, Fort Lee, Glen Rock, Hackensack, Hasbrouck Heights, Hillsdale, Lyndhurst, Mahwah, Maywood, Midland Park, Montvale, North Arlington, Norwood, Oradell, Paramus, Park Ridge, Ridgefield, River Vale, Saddle Brook, Saddle River, Teaneck, Northern Valley Regional high school district, Ramapo Indian Hills High school district, RiverDell Regional High School and Westwood Regional school district. In Closter, Dumont, Haworth, River Edge and Rochelle Park, there are vacant seats available because no petitions were filed by the July 28 deadline. Typically, in those cases, a write-in vote can count toward the seat and a resident can formally accept the nomination. Cliffside Park, Fairview, Garfield and Lodi still hold their school elections in April. Here is the unofficial school board candidate list for any contested November race. (*incumbent) Story continues below photo gallery. Northern Highlands Regional High School District UPPER SADDLE RIVER - Vote for three Lisa Halperin Christine Ferrarie James Mulvey HAWORTH - Vote for one Drew S. Krasny Lori Ross* Deborah "Maniscalco" Munoz Ramapo Indian Hills Regional High School District FRANKLIN LAKES - Vote for one Maria "Amparo" Underfer WYCKOFF - Vote for two Thomas Bogdansky* - "Educate, Empower, Excel" Othiamba Lovelace - "Educate, Empower, Excel" Doreen Mariani* - "Proven conservative leadership" River Dell Regional ORADELL - Vote for two Alan Feigenson* Barbara Kuchar* Robin Roland Levy RIVER EDGE - Vote for one Alicia Armental* Westwood Regional School District TOWNSHIP OF WASHINGTON - Vote for one Frank Romano III - "Integrity, honesty, experience" Anila K. Siraj WESTWOOD - Vote for two Nicole DeBonis Jason R. Garcia* - "Dedicated, proven, focused" Sabrina C. Krawczk- "Empowering every voice" Local Bergen County school board races BOGOTA - Vote for three Marco D. Navarro* - "For Bogota's Students" Idalia Alvarez* - "For the Children" Trina Olivo - "For the Children" Ambreen Naeem - "For the Children" CARLSTADT -Vote for three Scott Tronziger Francesco Ficetola* Michael F. Villopoto Jose Antonio Figueroa* EDGEWATER - Vote for three Laurie Molina* - "Integrity, Commitment, Experience" Krassimir Tassev* - "Integrity, Commitment, Experience" Thomas M. Quinton* - "Integrity, Commitment, Experience" Corinne Gehegan - "Educate Elevate" Diana Marina Robbana - "Parents for Edgewater" Monica-Tezla Solis Vega-Gorsun - "Parents for Edgewater" One-year unexpired term - vote for one Hagop "Jacques" Kalfayan - "Cut Your Taxes" Christina Stefani-Rackow* - "Integrity, Commitment, Experience" EMERSON - Vote for two Amy Mara* - "Integrity, Experience, Re-elect" Courtney L. Panaretos - "Public Education Matters" Shannon Lucas - "Learning. Leading. Listening" Emily M. Fernandez-Justo ENGLEWOOD - Vote for three Ronique Fougha-Hicks* Rachel Haber* - "Kids First" Randy E. Laratte - "Kids First" Allison Ross - "Kids First" Henry A. Washington Magalye Matos - "Together We Can" FAIRLAWN - Vote for three Aadil Yousuf - "Progress Over Politics" Edward Bertolini* - "For The Children" Michael L. Rosenberg - "Every Student First" Julie Kossoy Dianna M. Sopala - "Empowering Students' Future" Bazhena Tulchinski - "Smart School Spending" Lyudmila Koroleva - "Transparency Fiscal Responsibility" Marcy T. Reiz FORT LEE - Vote for three Paula Colbath* - "Fort Lee United" Kacy Knight* - "Fort Lee United" Keith V. Gosselin - "Education Service Integrity" Michele M. Perez - "Education Service Integrity" John T. McTiernan - "Education Service Integrity" Michael Rubino* - "Proud Lifelong Bridgeman GLEN ROCK - Vote for three Christine P. Parlamis* - "Honor Every Child" Zhe Tang Emily Hamilton Thorsen Stephanie Carosella* Angela F. Pucci-Bender - "Excellence in Education" HACKENSACK - Vote for three Demetrius Carroll* - "Hackensack Unites" Melanie J. Alston-Balaputra* - "Hackensack Unites" Michael R. Jones - "Hackensack Unites" Allen H. Summons II - "Students First" HASBROUCK HEIGHTS - Vote for three James Dunn - "Educators for Education" Carmela Schlitzer - "Educators for Education" Lori A. Cintron Helen Tejeda-Ramos Kathleen Sausa* Tammy Wixon One-year unexpired term Corinne Hope Ponte HILLSDALE - Vote for one Jonathan Braunstein Salvatore G. Sileo* - "Passion, Vision, Integrity" Unexpired one-year term - vote for one Kathleen Puerta* Daniel DeFeo LYNDHURST - Vote for three Michael Valvano* - "Teachers United" Joanne Russo - "Teachers United" William J. Tooma - "Teachers United" Suzanne C. Scivetti - "The Children's Voice" Chris Andrino Poulos Jr. MAHWAH - Vote for three Bryson A. McClure - "Future of Mahwah" Stephen T. Huston Prema C. Moorthy* - "Excellence in Education" Christopher L. Hughes* - "A Strong Voice" MAYWOOD - Vote for two Randi L. Cabana Ray Velez* - "Dad, Volunteer, Advocate" Felicia Benson-Kraft MIDLAND PARK - Vote for three Denise Velez Jessica Haftek Sandra Criscenzo* Brian McCourt* Richard Formicola* MONTVALE - Vote for two Alisha R. Foley* Anita Bagdat* Katharine R. Arena - "Student-centered commitment NORTH ARLINGTON - Vote for two Teressa M. Matvienko - "Students, Education, Faith" John F. Graci - "Students, Education, Faith" Michele Higgins* Schott Hughes* NORWOOD - Vote for two Jennifer R. Eisberg* - "Empowering Norwood Students" Stephanie Machin Yulri "Julie" Lee* - "Putting Students First" Unexpired one-year term - Vote for one Omar Pedrza Andino - "Putting Students First" ORADELL - Vote for three Kristen Genchi Dorothy Watson-Nichols* Jaime E. Downey* - "Support Special Education" Shasta Clinch Mark W. Uhlemann PARAMUS - Vote for three George J. Song* - "Our Children First" Alfonso Romeo Keri L. Greene* Alexander Aksanov - Learning, Evolving, Together" PARK RIDGE - Vote for two Richard Kuiters - "Cut your taxes" Holly Misley - "Cut your taxes" Shanai Jensen Rosemarie Malloy Matthew J. Rozzi - "Balanced, responsible results" RIDGEFIELD - Vote for two Michael A. Jacobs* - "Transparency, trust, teamwork" Claudia C. Narvaez* - "Transparency, trust, teamwork" Patrick Jo - "For our future" Maryam Juliet Kececioglu Inan - "Children first" RIVER VALE - Vote for two Virginia Senande* Thomas Quinn Louan Austin* Emily Leffler SADDLE BROOK - Vote for three Vincent A. Laurentino* - "Continue the progress" Mariana Ianneillo* - "Centered on students" Michael Accomando* - "Children first always" Lawrence S. DiBello Jr. - "Students come first" SADDLE RIVER - Vote for two Elizabeth Salazer* - "Trusted Wandell Volunteer" Rosa Jasinski - "Advocate for all" Tifphani White-King - "Vote MJ's Mom" TEANECK - Vote for three Eddie Laners III - "Accountability, Community, Excellence" Maxine O. Angel - "Accountability, Community, Excellence" Edward Ha* - "Together we grow" Latisha Garcia Isley-Robinson Clara Williams* - "Our Children's Future" Ana Marte This article originally appeared on Here are Bergen County's contested November 2025 school board races Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store