Updates on the Fight for Quality Public Education in Brevard County, FL

2020-08-25 - School Board Meeting

0:00 ♪♪

12:50 - Good evening.

12:51 I’m happy to welcome all of my fellow board members

12:53 and call the August 25th, 2020 school board meeting to order.

12:56 We continue to modify meeting processes

12:58 to COVID-19 pandemic.

13:00 Public attendance is permitted on a limited basis,

13:02 allowing for 30 persons,

13:04 in addition to staff and board members to be present.

13:07 Persons wishing to make public comments

13:08 are able to make them in person,

13:10 or were able to make recorded comments,

13:12 which we will listen to at the appropriate time.

13:14 Pam, roll call, please.

13:16 - Mrs. Belford.

13:17 - Present.

13:19 - Ms. McDougall.

13:20 - Present.

13:21 - Mrs. Deskevich.

13:22 - Present.

13:23 - Mr. Susan.

13:24 - Present.

13:25 - And Mrs. Campbell.

13:26 - Present.

13:27 - The board will now hold a moment of silent reflection

13:29 in memory of one of our BPS family members

13:31 who recently passed away.

13:33 April Daniels-Lockaby,

13:34 a teacher from Space Coast Junior Senior High School.

13:53 Thank you.

13:54 Please stand for the Pledge of Allegiance.

13:59 I pledge allegiance to the flag

14:01 of the United States of America

14:03 and to the republic for which it stands,

14:06 one nation, under God,

14:08 indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

14:15 At this time, I would like to offer my fellow board members

14:18 and Dr. Mullins the opportunity to recognize students, staff,

14:21 or members of the community.

14:23 Who would like to start us off this evening?

14:26 Ms. McDougall.

14:29 - Thank you, Madam Chair.

14:30 I have a couple of things.

14:31 First, I want to give a shout out

14:33 to Principal Jones at Audubon.

14:35 She sent me a video that she provided to the whole community

14:42 of Audubon students and parents

14:44 of what it’s going to look like when you go back to school.

14:46 It was amazing.

14:47 Well done.

14:48 So thank you, Principal Jones, for sharing that

14:50 and I so appreciate it.

14:52 I also want to remind classroom teachers

14:55 that Bright Ideas Classroom Grant is open

14:58 and it closes September 18th.

15:02 This is a grant, so if you have a great idea

15:04 and don’t have any money to fund it,

15:05 this might be a place to do that.

15:07 So don’t forget to check at Brevard Schools Foundation.

15:10 And last but not least is, quite frankly,

15:13 I want to give a shout out to our whole staff,

15:16 from our school staff to our administrative staff,

15:19 to our bus drivers, to people who keep the air conditioning

15:23 going.

15:23 This has been an amazing opening.

15:26 It’s not our typical opening.

15:28 So I want to just give a shout out

15:29 to everyone who has worked so hard,

15:31 put in so many hours to make this the best

15:33 that it can be at this time.

15:34 So thank you.

15:35 - Thank you, Ms. McDougall.

15:37 Ms. Doskovich?

15:38 - Thanks, Ms. Belford.

15:40 Of course, the entire staff, every employee is going above

15:44 and beyond right now with the different circumstances,

15:47 but I’d like to shine a little light on our ET people

15:51 at the moment because they are not only supporting

15:55 the traditional brick-and-mortar technology issues

15:58 that we traditionally have, they’ve extended that.

16:02 With the same amount of support staff

16:04 and the same amount of employees,

16:05 they’ve extended that to all the e-learning.

16:08 So they’re supporting students, they’re supporting parents,

16:10 teachers in a way they haven’t before

16:14 in a capacity they haven’t before.

16:16 I reached out to Mr. Cheatham this morning

16:18 and just asked a couple questions and he said,

16:20 “Today alone, they had 1,200 Zoom meetings going

16:23 at the same time.”

16:25 And he said, “That’s not counting Microsoft Teams

16:28 and all these other programs that they’re using.

16:30 That was just Zoom meetings going on.”

16:32 And also wanted to thank the tech associates

16:36 in each of the schools.

16:37 They’re spread really thin right now,

16:39 supporting teachers, students, parents again

16:42 within the schools.

16:43 And we recently made some adjustments that have spread

16:47 them even more thin.

16:48 So I’m still very concerned about the amount

16:50 of tech support staff that we have in the schools.

16:53 And last, the ET help desk.

16:55 Day one, they had 270 tickets they opened.

16:59 And did my voice just get louder?

17:01 Did they turn up?

17:03 Thank you back there, Mike.

17:06 So the help desk, like I said,

17:08 270 tickets they opened on day one

17:11 of issues they had to solve.

17:12 So they’re working tirelessly.

17:14 And Mr. Cheatham also suggested

17:16 that maybe I give a shout out to the staff

17:18 around the school that are filling in the gaps

17:20 for the rest of our tech specialists

17:25 that can’t get to all those.

17:26 So the front desk clerks are answering tech calls right now.

17:30 Our media specialists are all of a sudden

17:32 becoming tech specialists.

17:33 Everybody is becoming an assistant tech specialist

17:36 that is free and able.

17:38 So thank you to all those that are supporting

17:40 technology right now.

17:41 We are dependent on it and we appreciate it.

17:44 Thanks, Ms. Belford.

17:45 - Thanks, Ms. Deskovitch.

17:46 And I just have to say to add on to what you said,

17:49 I got an email from a parent the other day

17:50 that said the SRO at the school was trying

17:53 to fix a webcam on one of the computers.

17:55 So I think truly everyone on the team

17:58 has been pitching in to try to provide that support.

18:01 So thank you.

18:02 Ms. Campbell.

18:03 - Thank you.

18:04 I’m gonna piggyback a little bit on Ms. Deskovitch’s,

18:07 ‘cause I had texts on mine as well.

18:10 I got to visit 10 of my schools yesterday

18:13 on opening day and things were,

18:17 there was the whole Zoom going out

18:19 on the entire eastern seaboard thing.

18:21 But other than that, things were going really smoothly

18:23 and students were being cooperative.

18:25 But I had a conversation with one of our principals

18:28 that said, I’ve been asking about the computers

18:30 because we have that, that we talked about several,

18:33 I think Ms. Deskovitch, you asked about how many computers

18:35 were still out, right?

18:36 And one school said they loaned out 400,

18:38 this is an elementary school, 400 devices last spring.

18:42 And as of right now, they’ve gotten all back but four.

18:45 So I think that’s pretty, pretty amazing

18:48 that they’ve done so well.

18:50 And another, I talked to one of the techs at our schools

18:53 who said they still had a few left,

18:55 but they had gotten back,

18:56 15 of the ones they had gotten back were broken.

18:59 But rather than just, you know,

19:02 what’s the process we, you know, I forgot the term.

19:06 Yeah, right, DCR, he had said, okay, what can we do?

19:09 Can we piece them together?

19:10 And it actually, team had salvaged 10 of them

19:13 out of the 15 broken ones were able to kind of put parts

19:15 here and there and save 10

19:17 and so they could have devices for this fall.

19:19 So great job and great stewardship of our materials

19:24 and appreciate them at the district level

19:27 as well as the school level.

19:29 We’ve applauded our staff.

19:30 I just would like to say kudos to our students yesterday.

19:34 Every principal that I talked to talked about our students

19:37 doing such a great job.

19:38 They had a lot of challenges to deal with yesterday,

19:40 but the principal said, you know, the students walked in,

19:43 they all had a mask, they’ve been cooperating.

19:45 I saw first graders lining up in the hallway

19:47 and they were remembering to space out

19:50 and you know, just high school principal, same thing.

19:53 Students are doing a great job with it.

19:55 They’re really being cooperative.

19:57 So just wanted to give a big thank you to our students

20:00 for taking on the challenges.

20:02 The ones who are in the building and the ones who are at home

20:04 being patient and waiting on the technology to work,

20:08 but great job to all of our students

20:10 who have already come back.

20:12 - Absolutely.

20:13 Thank you, Ms. Campbell.

20:14 Mr. Susan.

20:15 - Thank you so much.

20:16 You know, the first day of school

20:17 has always been a magical one for when you’re a teacher

20:20 and the kids are coming in the hall

20:21 and even for us now as school board members

20:23 as we do it over and over again.

20:25 Sorry, this thing’s driving me nuts.

20:27 And this year it was, everybody came together

20:33 in a different way of magic.

20:34 It was the bus drivers, the crossing guards.

20:37 I stopped and thanked a couple of crossing guards.

20:39 Hey, thanks for doing everything you’re doing

20:41 all the way to the guys that deliver all of our materials,

20:45 the guys, the teachers, the administration,

20:47 everybody came together.

20:49 And I think that that’s what we do in education

20:52 and a lot of parents and people out there in the community,

20:55 we’ve been doing this for decades and this is a tough one.

21:00 And I’m just so proud of all of our people

21:02 who came together to make this happen.

21:04 And I think that a lot of people need to understand

21:07 that we all need to keep moving forward.

21:09 There’s gonna be hiccups.

21:10 I apologize.

21:11 I think the Zoom thing might’ve been

21:12 because I was uploading all my dependents

21:14 for the dependent audit.

21:15 I had so many of them going in there.

21:17 I might’ve crashed the system, but I think in general,

21:20 I think we as a school district did an amazing job

21:23 and I’m looking forward to doing everything we can

21:25 to make sure that we have their backs

21:27 and that we’re doing everything that we can.

21:28 My daughter, she started school nine years old

21:33 and she came back and I was like, honey,

21:35 she was all excited.

21:36 Talked to her before she got on the bus.

21:38 She gets on the bus, she comes home.

21:39 I talked to her.

21:40 I was like, please let this thing go right.

21:42 And she said, I loved it.

21:43 We had so much fun, all this stuff.

21:45 But dad, you gotta work on recess.

21:47 We happen to be socially distanced.

21:48 I got to wear my mask the whole time.

21:50 She was making some lobbying efforts on that end,

21:54 but loved it.

21:55 And so when you can see from the beginning

21:57 from your family as a parent all the way across the board

22:00 to seeing our teams come together,

22:02 I’m just so proud of this district.

22:03 And I just wanted to say that.

22:04 I did wanna tell the parents that are still out there.

22:06 There’s some of the parents that are still out there

22:08 trying to figure out what they’re gonna do.

22:10 Understand that we have to make financial

22:13 and economic decisions based upon what you do.

22:16 So we’d appreciate it if you did it sooner than later.

22:19 So if you can get off the fence and make a decision

22:22 on which way you’re gonna go

22:23 with the direction of the children,

22:24 let us know so that we can do that.

22:26 I wanted to thank the FSU director of football athletics

22:29 who went on a Zoom call with me

22:31 and walked me through how they clean their locker rooms,

22:34 how they take care of all of their athletic,

22:37 all the way from their equipment

22:39 to their locker rooms, to everything else.

22:41 And then I forwarded that information to Dr. Mullins.

22:44 And I think that we’re gonna be a good,

22:47 we should have some really good responses

22:49 in one of the areas that I think

22:50 is a very tentative place for the COVID.

22:54 And I wanted to also say thank you to Suhan

22:57 because we have our O’Gally locker room.

23:00 The air conditioning is on the agenda tonight

23:03 and that is a big deal.

23:05 Many people don’t know that we haven’t had air conditioning

23:08 in many of our locker rooms and we are addressing that.

23:11 So I wanted to say thank you to Dr. Mullins

23:12 for making that a promise.

23:15 And I’m excited because those kids now

23:18 will be more in tune to taking PE and everything else.

23:21 So with that, I have a couple of things later on

23:23 that I wanted to talk about, but that’s it.

23:25 Thank you.

23:26 - Thank you, Mr. Suzan.

23:27 Dr. Mullins.

23:28 - Thank you, Ms. Belford.

23:29 And just thank you to the board members

23:31 for recognizing so many diverse areas of our organization.

23:36 Many folks only see Brevard Public Schools

23:39 as the school facing reality

23:43 and that certainly is our core mission.

23:45 But behind every school are hundreds

23:47 and quite frankly, thousands of people who make schools run.

23:52 One of the things that we take for granted

23:55 until it doesn’t work is air conditioning.

23:58 And I have to just applaud

24:02 and commend our air conditioning team,

24:06 our chiller building automation and HVAC folks.

24:10 They literally worked 12 hour days leading up

24:15 to this past weekend to open schools.

24:18 I’m gonna work through the weekend,

24:20 responding to issues under Su’s leadership.

24:25 They had proactive measures.

24:27 They knew where the problem points were.

24:30 They turned air on over, I think on Saturday,

24:32 we had seven or eight buildings

24:34 that were something strange was going on.

24:38 They mitigated those.

24:39 We did have one of our schools

24:41 that continued to have some issues going into Monday.

24:44 They worked, I think, half the night last night

24:47 to get it up and running.

24:49 And just the commitment, understanding the raised necessity

24:55 of maintaining our HVAC with the increasingly lean staff,

25:00 just I wanna echo the compliments

25:02 to the teams across the district.

25:04 Mr. Susan alluded to our distribution team.

25:09 They last week distributed all of our PPE equipment

25:14 and supplies to our schools, all 80 plus schools.

25:18 And we reduced, that’s an increasingly lean team

25:23 as a result of restructuring this past year.

25:25 Our bus drivers, I had a wonderful start

25:29 to the day yesterday,

25:30 very early at our south compound and about 100 drivers

25:36 strolling in, the attitudes, the smiles,

25:39 the positivity to get back on the road and serve our kids.

25:43 It was just so impressive.

25:46 And I enjoyed visiting a few schools myself yesterday.

25:52 And our administrative teams,

25:55 the support they provided to teachers,

25:58 the positivity in the schools as I visited them

26:01 was top notch.

26:05 It was just so impressive.

26:08 The teaching staff to support everything possible

26:11 from escorting kids, the systems they had in place

26:14 because parents couldn’t escort their kids to class.

26:17 Our parents were absolutely fantastic.

26:20 They didn’t, they understood the new rules

26:23 and the procedures.

26:24 They were compliant.

26:25 They walked their kid up to the front of the school.

26:27 They said goodbye and they understood.

26:29 And we, I just want to express my appreciation

26:32 to our parents and our community.

26:34 And then our teachers took over.

26:35 They’re there in the hallway.

26:36 They take them to their classes

26:38 and just opened up their hearts to our kids immediately

26:42 as they came onto campus and even beforehand.

26:45 The virtual tours, the orientations,

26:47 the drive-through registrations,

26:50 the logistics of opening a district are enormous anyway

26:55 and our administrative teams and our teaching staff

26:57 just went above and beyond to make it all happen.

27:00 So we did, I want to share,

27:03 we did open our first new elementary school

27:06 in Brevard Public Schools in over 10 years.

27:09 And so they got off to a great start yesterday.

27:12 I want to remind our community,

27:14 we opened Viera Elementary School debt-free.

27:16 That school was paid for with impact fees

27:19 and we were only able to do that

27:21 because of the commitment of this board

27:23 and the fiscal responsibility

27:26 of the school board and our community.

27:29 So they got off to a great start yesterday as well.

27:31 I was able to spend a few minutes with them

27:33 and just a positive experience all day.

27:38 So to put it into context,

27:40 I met with cabinet at the end of the day.

27:42 We planned for a two-hour debriefing

27:44 to go over all the challenges and the issues.

27:47 We were done in 90 minutes.

27:48 I think that’s a record for a cabinet meeting.

27:50 So that’s because our team that you see in the back

27:54 were right there for their schools

27:56 to support them and to be responsive.

27:59 So my thanks to our leadership team as well.

28:02 Thank you, Ms. Belton.

28:03 - Thank you, Dr. Mullen.

28:05 First, if you all would please join me

28:08 in wishing Ms. McDougall a happy belated birthday.

28:11 She had a birthday this past weekend.

28:14 (audience applauding)

28:15 If you can imagine the stress that school board members

28:19 were feeling on Sunday as she was celebrating her birthday,

28:22 and I know that we were all anticipating

28:24 and hoping and praying that we had a smooth start on Monday.

28:27 So sorry that we were not able to be with you,

28:30 but I hope you had a very, very happy birthday

28:32 or the happiest that you could

28:33 given the circumstances of Ms. McDougall.

28:35 - Thank you.

28:38 - Like everyone else, I was out in schools yesterday

28:41 and just floored at the positivity and the excitement.

28:46 And even this weekend, talk about the preparation

28:52 for going into Monday.

28:54 This weekend, our lawn mowers were out mowing schools

28:59 to try to ensure that they were ready for students

29:02 to return on Monday.

29:03 And so not without glitches, obviously,

29:06 we had our online glitches, but I’ll tell you,

29:10 I was in schools when teachers were dealing with that

29:13 and the positivity even during that frustration

29:16 of just they were in communication

29:19 with the parents continuously,

29:20 letting them know what was going on via text

29:23 or different applications, keeping them in the loop.

29:26 I was able to see when a couple of kids

29:29 had been not able to get on for a little while

29:31 and then everyone was able to come together

29:32 and the excitement of it actually working.

29:36 Every school that I spoke to in different ways

29:40 mentioned the enormous amount of collaboration

29:43 that has gone on in our district within schools

29:46 and across schools.

29:48 Dr. Mullins and I were at Imperial

29:50 and the phenomenal music teacher there.

29:52 If you get a chance to go by

29:53 and take a look at her classroom

29:54 and the way that she’s adapted, absolutely amazing.

29:57 But she was telling us how music teachers

30:00 throughout the district came together to figure out

30:03 what do we do about singing?

30:05 What do we do about instruments?

30:06 What instruments can we play?

30:08 We can’t do the recorder anymore.

30:09 So what can we do?

30:11 How do we get those instruments?

30:14 One of our rockstar teachers at Kokina reached out to me

30:17 and shared that all of our sixth grade teachers

30:20 in Brevard County have a group Facebook page

30:23 where they’re sharing resources

30:25 and just anything to not recreate the wheel

30:31 and supporting each other and understanding technology.

30:36 There was MIMS I was at yesterday

30:40 and they were talking about the fact

30:42 that several of the teachers

30:43 who are not teaching in the e-learning platform

30:46 but have stronger technology skills

30:48 have been giving up their own personal time

30:50 to help their peers with the technology

30:52 and how to utilize everything.

30:54 So just amazing the way that everyone

30:56 has come together through this

30:58 and the amount of excitement and creativity

31:01 that we’re seeing in our schools

31:03 is great among all of the many challenges as well.

31:09 Also wanna thank we had up in the north end

31:13 North Brevard Charities.

31:18 That’s not the right name.

31:19 But anyway, we’ve had several groups

31:21 that have been doing prayers for our schools.

31:23 And so I was able to participate

31:25 in a prayer walk with astronaut high school last week.

31:27 Thursday night we’re doing Space Coast

31:30 but we’re doing the entire feeder chain.

31:32 And so we went from astronaut to Oak Park

31:36 to Madison Middle School.

31:37 And just a group of folks walking

31:39 and praying over the schools and the students

31:42 and the parents and all of us

31:44 making our way through all of this.

31:46 And I know there have been several others

31:47 throughout the county as well.

31:48 So wanna certainly thank all of those folks.

31:51 And then as if we didn’t have enough going on,

31:56 we had obviously everyone heard

31:58 about the closure of legacy.

32:00 And according to the judge’s order,

32:02 timing was bad for those families.

32:05 But I gotta tell you our team,

32:07 everyone from leading and learning ET,

32:12 Mr. Novelli from operations, you name it.

32:15 I think just about everyone on the team

32:17 has been out there to address that situation.

32:20 And our principals have been absolutely phenomenal

32:23 reaching out to each and every one of those families

32:25 and welcoming them back into our schools

32:28 to ensure that they were ready to go today.

32:30 So I have to give them a huge shout out

32:32 for taking that on top of everything else.

32:37 And then before I go into our agenda,

32:40 I wanted to take just a minute

32:42 because there’s been a good bit of conversation

32:45 around the FEA lawsuit, the order that came out this week.

32:50 So Mr. Gibbs, if you could just take a minute

32:52 to kind of explain what occurred there,

32:54 where we are so that everybody’s on the same page.

32:57 - Sure.

32:58 As everybody probably has seen on the news yesterday,

33:01 the judge in Leon County issued their order

33:05 finding that the order

33:07 that Commissioner of Education Corcoran issued

33:11 was unconstitutional in part.

33:13 And as a part of that order,

33:15 he redlined out all the parts that are unconstitutional,

33:18 which included all reopening requirements

33:21 for brick and mortar schools,

33:23 along with submitting plans to the district.

33:27 And again, yesterday, after that, before five o’clock,

33:31 the FEA, or not the FEA,

33:33 the state filed their appeal on that case.

33:36 And when a state agency files an appeal,

33:38 it acts as an automatic stay under the appellate rules.

33:42 So we are now in a holding pattern

33:44 as far as what the order means for the state and the districts.

33:49 I don’t know if the commissioner is gonna try

33:51 and issue a new order,

33:53 which would be one of his options to try and move this out

33:56 before it goes to the District Court of Appeal.

33:58 But, and I have not seen a timeline as of yet

34:01 as for scheduling hearings or anything to get it resolved

34:05 and as quickly as possible.

34:07 So I’m happy to take any additional questions.

34:12 - Anyone have questions for Mr. Gibbs on that?

34:16 I just have one quick question.

34:19 Are you suggesting that the commissioner could issue,

34:22 because the order was only based

34:25 on the specific emergency order,

34:30 are you suggesting that the commissioner

34:32 could issue a different order

34:34 that didn’t meet the judges?

34:37 - He could certainly issue an amended order

34:40 that tries to get around what the judge struck

34:44 and make it compliant.

34:45 I mean, I don’t know if he’d be successful

34:47 and might result in a, you know,

34:49 hey, we wanna challenge that as well on the same basis,

34:52 but he certainly has some options

34:55 and it wouldn’t be the first time

34:56 someone’s tried to move out an order on appeal

34:59 just to get around the court system.

35:02 - Okay, thank you, Mr. Gibbs.

35:06 Okay, that is going to bring us

35:09 to the adoption of the agenda, Dr. Mullins.

35:11 - Ms. Belford and members of the board on tonight’s agenda,

35:14 we have two presentations, administrative staff recommendations,

35:17 12 consent items, three action items,

35:20 and four information items.

35:22 The changes made to the agenda since being released

35:24 to the public in August four are as follows.

35:27 Item A7 on administrative staff recommendations

35:30 and item G24 on department school initiated agreements

35:34 were revised.

35:35 Added to this agenda are presentations

35:37 on budget and enrollment,

35:39 as well as fall athletics overview.

35:41 Also added is F12 on interlocal agreement CARES Act funding.

35:47 - Thank you, Dr. Mullins.

35:48 What are the wishes of the board?

35:49 - Move to approve.

35:50 - Second.

35:51 - Moved by Ms. Campbell, seconded by Ms. Deskevich.

35:53 Is there any discussion?

35:56 Please vote.

36:11 - I don’t have the box popping up.

36:26 - Can we do a voice vote on that, Ms. Deskevich?

36:46 - I don’t have it, I logged out and then.

37:00 - All right, the motion passes five zero.

37:03 Dr. Mullins, would you please let us know

37:05 about the administrative staff recommendation?

37:07 - Yes, there is one person on this agenda item

37:10 for the board to consider.

37:11 - What are the wishes of the board?

37:12 - Move to approve.

37:13 - Second.

37:14 - Moved by Mr. Susan, seconded by Ms. McDougall.

37:17 Is there any discussion?

37:21 Please vote.

37:34 The motion passes five zero.

37:38 Dr. Mullins, will you please tell us

37:41 about the presentations you have this evening?

37:44 - Ms. Belford and members of the board,

37:46 tonight we have two presentations.

37:47 The first is a budget and enrollment update.

37:50 Ms. Cindy Lesinski, our chief financial officer

37:53 will provide us with that information

37:55 and Chris Moore, assistant superintendent

37:57 of student services will follow

37:59 with the fall athletics overview.

38:01 Ms. Lesinski, will you go ahead

38:03 and provide the presentation of the board and the community?

38:33 - Okay, good evening board members.

38:41 Thank you for the opportunity

38:42 to keep you informed on several topics.

38:45 The first topic I wanna cover is the current

38:48 and projected impact of the coronavirus

38:51 on the state budget,

38:52 specifically reoccurring general revenue.

38:56 We will also revisit FY seven, eight state reductions.

39:02 Also would like to discuss what projected state

39:06 general revenue declines could mean

39:08 to our current budget outlook.

39:11 Talk about what steps we’re currently taking

39:14 and finally round that out with a brief on enrollment

39:18 for the first day numbers.

39:26 So the impact of the coronavirus severely impacted

39:29 the state’s general revenue collection

39:32 in the last quarter of FY 20.

39:35 They were actually, Florida was doing very well.

39:38 The state was doing very well all the way up into March.

39:41 And then the last quarter general revenue went down.

39:48 It went below the January estimate by almost $1.9 billion,

39:54 which is a 5.7% decline.

39:58 Sales tax was 6.1% below its expected level,

40:03 accounting for about 85% of the shortfall.

40:06 So tourism is something that the state of Florida depends on.

40:11 And the last quarter of 2019 took a severe hit.

40:19 On August 14,

40:21 the Office of Economic and Demographic Research

40:25 held their general revenue fund estimating conference.

40:32 There were substantial adjustments

40:34 to the earlier general revenue estimate in January.

40:37 And then you can see in 2021,

40:40 there was a $3.4 billion adjustment.

40:44 And then there was also,

40:46 which equates to a 9.9% decline compared to January estimates.

40:52 And then in FY 21-22,

40:55 the adjustment was $2 billion or a 5.6% decline.

41:01 Again, that is compared to the January estimates.

41:05 And in January, no one had any idea

41:09 that we would be where we are today.

41:12 Now, the estimates assumed several things.

41:17 They assumed a vast improvement

41:19 with the availability of that vaccine in 2021.

41:24 And it also assumed that Florida is permitted

41:26 to utilize remaining CARES Act funds

41:28 to mitigate any revenue shortfalls.

41:31 So those were the two assumptions that they used

41:34 when coming up with this forecast.

41:36 And again, it is a forecast.

41:38 And then below, you can see that the state’s adjustments

41:41 during a similar time in 2007 and ‘08.

41:46 And there, this provides context to where we are projected

41:50 to experience this year and next.

41:54 And then you can see in 2007 and ‘08,

41:57 there was an adjustment of $2 billion or a 7.5% decline.

42:10 And then finally, in mid-September next month,

42:14 there’s going to be a long-range outlook conference.

42:18 And this will include the adjusted general revenue estimates

42:22 that the EDR projected.

42:28 So they will include those.

42:30 And then when they do that,

42:31 they will create a three-year outlook.

42:34 And from that three-year outlook,

42:35 we’ll get a really good preview of what FY21-‘22 will look like.

42:40 Again, that’s going to be next month.

42:42 And then the legislature will use that information

42:47 when they reorganize following the November election.

42:52 And they’ll have a better idea that we’ll have –

42:55 again, they’ll have estimates, but they’ll have a better idea

42:57 and then come and decide what they want to do

43:00 and examine the health of the state budget.

43:03 So more to come on that.

43:09 So revisiting fiscal year ‘27 – I’m sorry –

43:14 revisiting fiscal year ‘07-‘08,

43:17 you can see that the state overall reduced the FEFP budget

43:25 by nearly $500 million.

43:29 And what they did was they took a percentage across the entire

43:35 board

43:36 of FEFP across all the districts,

43:39 and the first reduction that we took in 2007-2008 was in the

43:44 second calculation,

43:45 and you can see that was $7.4 million.

43:49 And then the Brevard took another decrease in the third

43:53 calculation,

43:53 and that was $6.1 million, equating to $13.5 million in 2007 and

44:02 ‘08.

44:03 And that just kind of gives you some context about the last time

44:06 there was a downturn in the economy and what the impact was.

44:23 So what does a potential reduction mean for BPS in FY ‘21?

44:34 You know, again, during fiscal year 2007 and ‘08,

44:38 BPS lost $13.5 million in state FEFP revenue

44:43 by extrapolating the current state revenue loss and state

44:48 variables.

44:49 The worst case for Brevard this year, the worst case scenario,

44:53 would be a 3.9% reduction, and that would equate to a $22.4

44:59 million reduction.

45:00 Now, this reduction assumes that the state does not use any

45:04 reserves

45:04 to offset their revenue shortfall.

45:08 It also assumes that they take a proportional cut across all

45:13 entities

45:13 that receive general revenue funds.

45:17 It is likely the state will use a portion of the state’s

45:21 reserves,

45:21 but conservatively, because, you know, again,

45:25 there are still a lot of unknowns out there.

45:28 The state will not know how long the coronavirus will affect the

45:33 state,

45:33 so this is my opinion.

45:36 I don’t believe they will use all their reserves.

45:38 It wouldn’t be prudent, but I believe that they will use some of

45:43 those

45:43 to offset any kind of budget reductions.

45:52 And again, the EDR has provided updated estimates,

45:54 and we don’t know exactly what the budget impact will be for BPS.

45:58 We will have a better picture following the long-range financial

46:02 conference

46:02 mid-September, and while we remain responsible and prudent,

46:06 we will focus on reopening our schools safely,

46:10 protecting our current teacher staff

46:13 and focus on delivering excellent education to every student,

46:16 and we will continue to monitor expenditures for ongoing savings

46:20 and protect fund balance to buffer any potential mid-year

46:30 revenue loss.

46:33 And then I know the board understands this next point,

46:36 but this is just something I want to say for the public to

46:39 understand.

46:40 When we talk about a budget plan,

46:43 a budget plan is based on projected revenue to cover projected

46:50 expenditures,

46:51 and it is just a plan.

46:52 It is not money in the bank,

46:55 and so when revenue comes in less than expected,

47:02 then there has to be adjustments to balance the budget.

47:06 So again, a budget isn’t money in the bank.

47:11 If we don’t collect that revenue for whatever reason

47:15 with the uncertainties that there are,

47:17 there has to be some kind of adjustment to make sure that we

47:22 balance.

47:22 And talking to CFOs across the state,

47:25 they have advised their boards to hold on to as much savings

47:30 and posture for potential mid-year reductions.

47:35 And then every dollar we save today is a dollar that can benefit

47:40 us tomorrow.

47:41 And then so what are we doing?

47:43 These are some of the prudent steps that we are taking as we

47:46 move forward.

47:47 We’re analyzing district positions as they become vacant.

47:50 We’re restricting out of county travel.

47:53 We will continue to monitor contracts for potential savings,

47:57 evaluate the use of CARES Act funds to see if we can use those

48:01 funds

48:01 to maintain workforce stability.

48:04 We’re going to do a district-wide position analysis

48:08 and also establish quarterly re-budgeting process

48:13 to continue to evaluate the lapse rate.

48:17 In that way, we will have a timely data that can give us a

48:21 better insight

48:21 of where we are with our financial position.

48:28 Are there any questions so far?

48:34 And so now we get to move into student enrollment.

48:36 And as everyone mentioned, yesterday was our first day of school,

48:41 and this is just kind of the first snapshot of the first day

48:47 count.

48:48 You can see that we were under-enrolled in the first count.

48:52 First day counts are always difficult to project.

48:54 And this year, as you can imagine, it was a bit more challenging,

48:58 from Zoom going down to late buses

49:00 and simply the human element of hand-counting kids in classrooms.

49:05 That said, we do have many kids that have not yet registered for

49:09 school,

49:09 and our administrative teams are reaching out to those families

49:12 to help get them registered.

49:15 The state anticipated these enrollment fluctuations this year,

49:19 and through the July 6th emergency order,

49:25 the DOE committed to hold school districts harmless for lower

49:29 enrollment

49:30 through at least the fall semester.

49:33 So we have some time.

49:35 And again, the first day counts are always a little bit messy.

49:40 You can see on this slide, if you compare student membership

49:45 last year to this year,

49:48 there is about 11,500 student difference.

49:53 As each day goes on, I think those numbers will balance out and

49:58 grow.

50:00 And this is just a first look.

50:02 You can see Brevard Virtual, that number increased quite a bit

50:07 from last year.

50:08 Charter schools also increased.

50:11 Home school, I’ll talk about that one at the bottom.

50:15 The home school on the top chart underneath charter schools

50:19 talks about home schoolers that receive some kind of service

50:27 from Brevard schools.

50:29 So if they receive some kind of benefit or service from Brevard

50:34 schools,

50:34 they would get on that row underneath the charter schools.

50:39 McKay scholarships went down a bit, and family empowerment

50:43 scholarships did go up.

50:44 When you look at that bottom line, the home education,

50:47 that is the one that we need to monitor and watch.

50:53 If you compare the actual from last year to this year,

50:57 you’ll see that there is a significant jump in home schooling,

51:01 and that’s something, again, that we’ll have to monitor.

51:08 Is there any questions?

51:11 Ms. Deskovitz.

51:12 The last number that I heard we were down was 7,000 students.

51:16 Are you saying we are down 14,000 students?

51:21 Ms. Deskovitz, Cindy, I’ll go ahead.

51:24 So this number represents all K through 12, pre-K to 12.

51:31 We knew we had about 7,000, I think it’s down to 5,500 now,

51:36 elementary,

51:36 that haven’t registered.

51:39 So, yes, this represents students K through 12,

51:42 so that 5,500 to 7,000 are inclusive of the 14,000.

51:48 Keep in mind that we don’t have any confidence that that number

51:53 is accurate right now.

51:54 The counting process isn’t very manual, it is completely manual.

52:01 Literally, people in buildings walk around to classrooms,

52:04 they count heads, and they put them on a piece of paper.

52:07 That piece of paper gets translated to the office.

52:09 They accumulate those and tally numbers.

52:13 Our first day count is always difficult in a normal circumstance.

52:18 The reality is we had to validate e-learning kids.

52:24 We had to see them online, so some kids didn’t log on until

52:29 later.

52:29 They got bumped off because of Zoom and we couldn’t count them

52:32 because they weren’t online.

52:34 We had parents coming into our schools all day yesterday and

52:39 today.

52:39 I know our e-learning numbers jumped over 1,000 overnight from

52:43 last night to today.

52:44 So, at this point, at this moment, working with staff, we’re not

52:51 alarmed with enrollment.

52:53 Certainly, home school increases is concerning.

52:58 That’s 1,000 students.

53:00 But we see parents coming into our schools every day.

53:04 Our next official count is Thursday and then the following

53:09 Tuesday.

53:09 The following Tuesday or Monday?

53:11 So, Monday is our third official count.

53:16 I would echo Mr. Susan’s comments earlier.

53:20 We know we have parents who are waiting to see our school is

53:23 going to stay open.

53:24 We are open and we are continuing to be open.

53:27 And we’re going to serve our parents and our kids.

53:31 I echo the sentiments of the board, the success of starting our

53:37 schools yesterday,

53:38 and the great work of our teachers to welcome our kids back and

53:43 our administrative teams.

53:44 We continue to remain ready to serve our families, both in any

53:48 one of the platforms,

53:49 e-learning or face-to-face.

53:52 And we’ll continue to reach out to our families to connect with

53:55 them and bring them into our schools.

53:59 I appreciate that you’re not panicked, but that’s a $100 million

54:04 price tag

54:04 if those families don’t enroll their children in our schools.

54:10 I think it’s okay to panic.

54:13 That changes the look of Brevard Public Schools.

54:18 If that continues to maintain, absolutely.

54:21 I just think we need to be very clear and loud about that

54:25 so that people know what this looks like down the road over this

54:30 next year

54:30 if 14,000 students do not return to Brevard Public Schools,

54:33 because I don’t think the public understands.

54:40 So I wanted to say thank you so much for your presentation.

54:44 I love the fact that we restricted out-of-county travel,

54:47 and just so that everybody knows, that includes out-of-county,

54:49 out-of-state, everything.

54:51 Out-of-county is restricted, so I wanted to say thank you to

54:54 that.

54:54 I love the fact that you are establishing quarterly rebudgeting

54:59 for the labs.

55:00 One of the most frustrating things, Dr. Mullins, that we talked

55:03 about

55:03 is at the end of the year how much money is falling to the

55:06 bottom line,

55:06 but you’re actually taking a proactive so that we can adjust

55:09 based upon the year.

55:09 So thank you so much for that.

55:12 I would say one of the areas that we could add to this – this

55:16 is just me speaking –

55:16 we have a series of speakers, consultants, and individuals that

55:20 come in

55:20 and they speak to us in various forms, right?

55:23 But we’ve never really set up a metrics to see how that impacts

55:27 directly into our education piece,

55:29 so that might be an area we look at in the future.

55:32 And that’s just the fact that sometimes we have these people

55:35 come in, they teach us,

55:36 but then how it unpacks into the schools may not be as prominent

55:40 as what we want.

55:41 So at a time when there’s this, maybe that’s some area that we

55:44 could look at, that’s all.

55:45 And then I did. I wanted to say one more time, Dr. Mullins,

55:49 parents, please,

55:51 besides the fact of trying to figure out how we’re going to do

55:54 this,

55:54 when you come in late, it impacts the staff, the teachers.

55:59 The staff has to sit down, re-register, do all that stuff.

56:02 They have to reschedule.

56:03 The teacher has to sit down and add that person to the classroom,

56:06 catch that person up.

56:08 Everything’s kind of impacted beyond that,

56:10 and we want everybody to take the time to make the right

56:13 decisions.

56:13 But at some point, please let us know.

56:15 But other than that, everything else here, I absolutely love.

56:19 Thank you so much for all your work.

56:21 Really appreciate you coming on board and doing everything that

56:24 you’ve been doing.

56:24 Just want to give her a shout-out for that. Thank you.

56:27 Thank you, Mr. Susan. Any other board members have questions or

56:31 comments?

56:31 Ms. Campbell?

56:35 Briefly. There we go.

56:37 So one of the things that you mentioned was that the executive

56:42 order –

56:42 and I think Mr. Gibbs, if you could – the part that the judge

56:46 struck just recently,

56:47 of course, we’re yet to see how – it didn’t affect the funding

56:51 part, correct, as far as them –

56:53 it doesn’t change as far as they’re saying they’ll hold us

56:56 harmless for this –

56:56 Right. He left that in as constitutional

56:58 as long as it wasn’t tied to the opening brick and mortar by the

57:03 end of August.

57:04 But I just wanted to clarify, at this time,

57:06 the state hasn’t given us necessarily a promise that that won’t

57:12 be adjusted come spring.

57:14 Is that correct?

57:15 That’s correct.

57:16 I think they still need to evaluate the numbers, but they did

57:19 promise not to hold –

57:20 they promised to hold us harmless through the fall and not to

57:24 use the October survey numbers.

57:26 Right. So our funding that we’ll get in the fall months –

57:32 I can’t remember exactly the times that it comes in, but, you

57:37 know, windows –

57:37 we’ll get according to our projections from last spring.

57:39 But there’s – like I said, there’s no promise necessary that

57:42 won’t be adjusted in the spring

57:42 as we get our numbers in the February count.

57:46 Right. That is correct.

57:48 And so one of the things that we need to look at, if numbers do

57:53 stay lower

57:53 and enrollment stays lower, is to make sure that with less need

57:58 for teachers,

57:59 because there’s less students, that we grab that lapse rate from

58:04 the teachers

58:04 and make sure that we save that funding in order to possibly

58:08 have to pay something back after the fall.

58:11 Thank you.

58:13 Ms. Campbell, just to clarify, the difference between the

58:18 district’s six-day count,

58:20 the first week of count, and our October counts, the state’s

58:25 first official count of our students is in October.

58:29 We do our counts at the beginning of the year.

58:31 That’s an internal function to then evaluate where we may need

58:36 to do some allocation adjustments in our schools.

58:40 So these numbers are just done internally.

58:43 They’re not reported to state.

58:45 That’s not done until October for what’s called October FTE, and

58:50 then again in February for second semester for February FTE.

58:53 Thank you.

58:57 And to your point, Ms. Campbell, they can guarantee our funding

59:04 through the fall semester based on student numbers,

59:07 but that doesn’t guarantee that they won’t make an adjustment,

59:11 as Ms. Lisinski referenced.

59:12 So there is the potential for an adjustment based on student

59:16 numbers,

59:16 as well as an adjustment based on state revenue as we move

59:21 forward, and I think that’s an important thing.

59:25 That is a scary point.

59:27 It is a very scary point, yes.

59:29 Just to add clarification, it is a difficult year to speculate

59:35 exactly what could happen.

59:38 In ‘07-‘08, there was not an adjustment to enrollment.

59:41 It was a statewide budget reduction.

59:45 It was a percent reduction.

59:47 That’s why we make the analysis or comparison to ‘07-‘08 when

59:55 there was a light $2 billion reduction in revenue,

1:00:00 which the state has obviously has done and could do again.

1:00:05 Adjustments in enrollment are difficult because in our February

1:00:10 FTE calculation doesn’t come back until I want to –

1:00:13 or the adjustments don’t come until April.

1:00:16 So that’s well, well into three-quarters of the year into our

1:00:21 budget,

1:00:21 which is very difficult at that time to make budget adjustments.

1:00:24 That’s why we’re monitoring it early now and carefully

1:00:30 considering what the projections are

1:00:32 and watching our numbers and looking closely at our schools.

1:00:37 Our principals are working right now to reach out to their

1:00:41 families and make contact

1:00:42 and provide them the support that they need and understand where

1:00:46 our numbers are.

1:00:47 The number that we know is impacting our enrollment is home

1:00:54 education.

1:00:55 That’s over 1,000 students higher than it was a year ago.

1:00:58 So there’s no question that that is an accurate number.

1:01:01 So that does have a significant impact on the enrollment in our

1:01:07 schools and potentially future revenue.

1:01:11 Ms. Lisinski, do you know the balance of the 3.2 percent

1:01:16 contingency that we have in reserves?

1:01:19 I’m sorry.

1:01:20 The dollar amount. Do you know the dollar amount?

1:01:22 It’s 19 million – I’m looking at Karen – 19.9 million.

1:01:30 Which, I mean, potential 22 million hit if the state reduces.

1:01:43 We have 19 million in reserves.

1:01:47 A potential 100 million hit midyear.

1:01:56 You may not be panicking.

1:01:59 This does not look good.

1:02:02 So for all of our parents out there – and, Mr. Susan, I think

1:02:05 you make a great point that people are probably still trying to

1:02:08 figure out what’s right.

1:02:08 But in the best interest of students, if they’re not comfortable

1:02:13 coming back into brick-and-mortar schools at this point,

1:02:15 we would certainly encourage them to take advantage of the e-learning

1:02:19 opportunities

1:02:19 so that we can keep them on the same pace as their peers in the

1:02:23 classrooms when they’re ready to come back to the classroom.

1:02:25 You know, that would be a smooth transition for them.

1:02:29 But the bottom line is that we currently have a lot of students

1:02:32 that we don’t know where they are or what education they’re

1:02:35 getting in.

1:02:35 So I think if we can get to a point of clearing that up, we’ll

1:02:40 be much better off.

1:02:42 Ms. Lisinski, thank you so much for your leadership in all of

1:02:46 this.

1:02:46 I know it’s been a trying time, and the information that you’re

1:02:49 putting forward certainly puts some additional stress on your

1:02:52 department to figure out how to guide us going forward.

1:02:55 But we appreciate you.

1:02:56 I appreciate that.

1:02:57 Thank you.

1:02:58 Absolutely.

1:02:59 All right.

1:03:00 Ms. Moore is next, I think.

1:03:19 All right.

1:03:20 Let’s see if I can find what I’m looking for.

1:03:29 This is it.

1:03:31 Hey, good evening, everyone.

1:03:33 How is everybody?

1:03:34 Fabulous.

1:03:36 I first want to start off by introducing our new assistant

1:03:40 assistant director for student activities, Dr. Andrew Ramjit.

1:03:44 And so he started with us July 14th, I will say, in the height

1:03:51 of everything we were trying to do and all the controversy.

1:03:55 So I first wanted to make sure to bring him up here.

1:03:58 I promised him he would not have to present today for the first

1:04:02 time.

1:04:02 But I did want everybody to lay eyes on him and to be introduced

1:04:06 to him and know that he has been a tremendous asset to student

1:04:09 services and has really owned a lot of all of the decision

1:04:12 making that we’ve had to do.

1:04:13 So so thank you personally for media.

1:04:15 Thank you. Before we start talking about fall athletics, I just

1:04:20 want to talk just very briefly about return to activity, because

1:04:25 I would be really remiss if I did not give a personal thank you

1:04:29 and a personal shout out to our athletic directors.

1:04:33 You know, everybody has opinions about the right thing to do.

1:04:38 And what we have found is we have gone through this time that

1:04:43 most, you know, 50 percent of our staff and community really

1:04:48 wanted athletics and 50 percent didn’t.

1:04:50 50 percent really wanted us to come back to school and 50

1:05:00 percent really didn’t. It was it was it is no surprise to us

1:05:03 when we try to get some feedback and we find out that every

1:05:03 decision we make is going to make somebody happy and somebody

1:05:03 angry.

1:05:03 But one of the things that we do try to do every time we make a

1:05:07 decision is go into it eyes wide open.

1:05:09 How do we mitigate all of the factors that could potentially

1:05:13 cause any risk of harm or health? And we did that with our

1:05:17 athletic directors and we sat down with the return to activity

1:05:21 plan.

1:05:21 We trained them, we trained our principals and they took it very

1:05:26 seriously. And so as we go into our fall program, I have

1:05:30 absolute confidence that our athletic directors and our coaches

1:05:35 are going to take the precautions and the mitigating factors

1:05:39 seriously as we move move into our plan.

1:05:44 It was hard work. What our athletic directors did. It was unlike

1:05:49 anything they ever had to do before.

1:05:51 And so if I could ask anything, a personal shout out to some of

1:05:55 our athletic directors at some of our schools would go a long

1:05:59 way to letting them know how much we appreciate the protection

1:06:02 that they took and wrapped around our students this summer.

1:06:06 So as we go into fall athletics, we really thank you, Andrew. We

1:06:11 really wanted to keep a couple of things in mind. And I’m going

1:06:15 to tell you that this presentation was already sent to the board.

1:06:19 I’m going to say last week, early late last week. So I’m not

1:06:23 going through the entire presentation.

1:06:25 I just want the community to know what’s in here. It’s available

1:06:29 for them to see. It’s available for them to look for their own

1:06:31 personal interests.

1:06:32 So I’m not going to spend a whole lot of time on a whole lot of

1:06:36 slides, but I am going to give an overview of what’s in here.

1:06:39 I think this slide is really important because it talks about

1:06:42 why we made the decisions that we did.

1:06:44 First off, you know, when you have a lot of people with a lot of

1:06:48 opinions, most of them just dissenting from one another, we have

1:06:51 to go to who guides us.

1:06:53 And in athletics, who guides us is FHSA, the Florida High School

1:06:57 Athletic Association.

1:06:58 And within the Florida High School Athletic Association, they

1:07:02 have a group called the Sports Medicine.

1:07:04 What does AC stand for? Advisory Committee. I just call them

1:07:10 smack.

1:07:10 But the Sports Medicine Advisory Committee also advised Florida

1:07:14 Athletics.

1:07:15 And for those of you guys who don’t know, as as is any large

1:07:20 organization,

1:07:21 they had to come together and talk and then go away and think

1:07:25 and come together and talk and go away and think.

1:07:27 And I think it was finally on the fourth meeting that they came

1:07:31 back with the Florida sports.

1:07:33 Florida high school sports may start as early as August 24th.

1:07:38 And that then left us to go, OK, we may start on August 24th.

1:07:43 What is best for our students? What is safest for our students?

1:07:47 How do we build up protections and address health concerns while

1:07:53 starting our fall athletic program?

1:07:56 So our second consideration is that Florida High School Athletic

1:08:00 Association kind of kind of said, listen,

1:08:02 as long as you play within some time period, we’re going to

1:08:06 allow your teams to be qualified for the state athletic series.

1:08:10 So we wanted to make sure we stayed within the parameters that

1:08:13 our students could still be competitive within the sports, the

1:08:17 state series.

1:08:17 And and that’s important for a lot of reasons, but none of which

1:08:22 is that least among them is that it will allow our students to

1:08:27 be seen on a competitive stage against some of some of the best

1:08:30 in the state.

1:08:31 And we wanted to make sure that that happened. It’s not going to

1:08:35 surprise you that not third on our list,

1:08:39 but one of the other areas that we really wanted to pay

1:08:43 attention to was costs.

1:08:44 We had a big board workshop. It seems like a lifetime ago,

1:08:48 but I think it was maybe six months ago about the rising cost of

1:08:53 our athletics, including a rising cost for our officials.

1:08:57 Right. Some of some other contract language has increased how

1:09:01 much it costs to run a sports program.

1:09:03 So we really tried to look at ways to minimize, minimize the

1:09:07 cost going into this year, as well as how do we minimize health

1:09:12 and safety concerns?

1:09:13 So so that was the third thing.

1:09:16 And then the last thing is that we really, really, really wanted

1:09:21 to allow our students to continue to participate in sports in a

1:09:26 way that was safe and healthy,

1:09:28 in a way that we could mitigate risks in a way that we could

1:09:33 control as much as we could for the unknown.

1:09:36 And when we get to kind of the end of the presentation, I’ll

1:09:39 talk to you a little bit about, you know, things that we’re

1:09:42 doing and concerns moving forward,

1:09:43 because the last thing we want is for athletics to impact

1:09:47 instruction.

1:09:48 And and I have to be honest and frank and say that there’s a

1:09:51 possibility that that’s going to happen.

1:09:53 And I’ll talk about that at the very end. So how is this

1:09:57 presentation set up in each of the fall sports?

1:10:01 You’re going to see a facing slide that talks about the stages.

1:10:06 So stage one talks about when we had very small groups, we had

1:10:09 less than 10 in a group.

1:10:10 That was right up until this today, the 25th, right up until

1:10:15 today for for football.

1:10:17 And then we wanted to provide them about a week to two weeks to

1:10:21 work in some larger groups, still less than 50, still

1:10:26 controlling the movement of equipment,

1:10:29 still really making sure there’s not physical contact. We are

1:10:33 building up as we go into the school year.

1:10:35 And then as we go into stage three in every single sport, you’re

1:10:39 going to see it looks like the full FHSA practice.

1:10:42 It’s full, full contact, full pads, full equipment. However, we

1:10:47 are still minimizing the teams to the minimum limit for FHSA.

1:10:53 It does mean that some students may not have the ability to

1:10:58 participate in sports as we as we have in the past,

1:11:01 in that we’re not fielding teams of 60 kids on football where it’s

1:11:05 minimum requirements, 50 kids.

1:11:07 That’s what we’re fielding. So, again, each fall sport is going

1:11:12 to have a facing page and each sport is then going to just have

1:11:15 a page that talks about what their divisions look like.

1:11:18 So some of them are divided up into Division one and Division

1:11:23 two based on both ability and crosstown rivals and minimizing

1:11:27 travel.

1:11:28 And some of them are divided into north and south. And so that

1:11:32 was the work of our athletic directors and some of our coaches

1:11:35 that got together and had those conversations.

1:11:37 And you’ll see to the right that we tried to maximize the number

1:11:41 of games that we could play in the time that we had available.

1:11:45 And in each one, you’re going to see that it is in county games

1:11:50 only. Just as a reminder, we do have a return to school plan.

1:11:53 The return to school plan was really super specific about things.

1:11:57 And when those things were already in place, we used those

1:12:00 things for our athletic program.

1:12:01 So no visitors, no visitors, no out of county field trips, no

1:12:07 out of county athletic trips.

1:12:09 This is actually as I’m even looking at this PDF, there was a

1:12:13 change to this PDF that is not accounted for here.

1:12:16 And it says no JV to be played. We are playing JV. So that I

1:12:20 apologize should have been taken off of there.

1:12:22 We are playing JV. We have that scheduled. We’re good to go on

1:12:27 that. Parents don’t panic.

1:12:28 I’ll make sure when we upload this to the board website that it

1:12:33 gets corrected.

1:12:34 So again, I’m not going to spend a whole lot of time. You see

1:12:38 volleyball has the facing page, then the division page.

1:12:40 And it is the same with all the sports. Golf, swimming, diving,

1:12:44 cross country and bowling all have the same facing page because

1:12:48 they’re all on the same calendar.

1:12:49 And then they each have different division pages. It again talks

1:12:53 about the matches in county games and whether or not there’s

1:12:57 going to be a Cape Coast Conference championship.

1:12:58 So golf, swimming and diving, cross country and bowling will all

1:13:02 have their individual pages.

1:13:04 I don’t want to spend a whole lot of time on individual sports

1:13:07 because I know everybody has their own sport they’re looking at.

1:13:10 And it’s just going to be easier for you to dive in and pull

1:13:13 this off of the website and to look at it again.

1:13:15 The only changes there is JV JV sports in in the in the sports

1:13:24 that have that.

1:13:26 So here’s what I just want to spend a little bit of time on. We

1:13:30 are still holding to universal precautions and this is really itty

1:13:34 bitty tiny print.

1:13:35 But I none of this is going to surprise anybody that’s watched

1:13:39 any of our presentations.

1:13:41 What we try to do is decrease exposure as much as possible and

1:13:46 increase the protections that we can give kids.

1:13:49 A great example of that would be that when you are indoors

1:13:53 having a team meeting, we are following the return to school

1:13:57 mandate of school face of face coverings.

1:13:59 And if you are not able to socially distance. So the things in

1:14:05 here are not going to surprise you.

1:14:07 Again, the last two bullets are probably the ones that we’ve had

1:14:12 the most people write us about and want want to see one

1:14:16 explanation of and the explanation of it’s part of our return to

1:14:21 school plan.

1:14:21 No visitors, no out of county travel.

1:14:27 Continuing, we are going to ask players and coaches and and

1:14:32 officials to screen.

1:14:33 This is an extracurricular activity. They are choosing to be

1:14:38 there.

1:14:38 And so we are making sure that they are healthy as they

1:14:42 participate.

1:14:43 Face coverings we already spoke about. As you see, there’s going

1:14:48 to be some things in there that you that you think, well, I can

1:14:51 see how that works in, you know, in golf or bowling, but I don’t

1:14:54 see how that works in football.

1:14:56 And so what’s really important to know is that our athletic

1:15:00 directors are getting together. What day is that? What tomorrow?

1:15:04 They are getting together tomorrow and they’re going to start

1:15:08 looking at each of these sections and do some very sports

1:15:12 specific guidelines.

1:15:13 So, for example, face coverings on sidelines. I had a principal

1:15:18 call me today and say, Chris, I think we have I think we have a

1:15:22 solution for that.

1:15:23 You know, we’re going to get those ones that are worn around the

1:15:26 neck and the kids are going to pull them up and pull them down

1:15:28 and they’re not going to leave their face coverings on the on

1:15:31 the sidelines.

1:15:31 And they’re not and they’re going to have them available and

1:15:34 they’re the only ones that are going to touch them.

1:15:36 So schools are already thinking through these mitigating factors

1:15:41 that could protect them as much as possible.

1:15:44 So continuing on to sidelines and benches, just like I said, it’s

1:15:49 not going to surprise you to hear we want the the least amount

1:15:53 of people standing on the sidelines as we can possibly get, that

1:15:58 we want to make sure that they’re cleaned and that they’re not

1:16:02 sharing equipment.

1:16:03 You know, these are the little things that we can do that could

1:16:09 help mitigate the transmission of of really. For those of you

1:16:14 who have been in in athletics for a long time, you know,

1:16:17 wrestling season doesn’t come and go without kids getting a ringworm.

1:16:21 Some of these protections that we have in place should should

1:16:25 probably be in place all the time anyway, because I imagine we

1:16:28 could avoid a lot of a lot of infection and illness if we did it.

1:16:31 And so I think that we’re starting a great precedence for future

1:16:36 future needs.

1:16:37 Locker rooms, we are going to make sure that those are clean and

1:16:40 sanitized daily and that we are going to be looking at those

1:16:43 high touch surfaces.

1:16:44 None of this is new. This is all part of the reopening plan.

1:16:48 Locker room etiquette. We had a couple of phone calls saying, I

1:16:53 really want my child to be able to shower and dress.

1:16:57 You know, they’re going to be able to do that.

1:17:00 We’re discouraged.

1:17:01 it. If they are able, we would much rather them go home, use

1:17:05 their shower at home, you

1:17:07 know, leave their dirty clothes and sweaty clothes at home. But

1:17:11 we do understand that,

1:17:12 you know, for example, cross country runs early in the morning,

1:17:15 and they’re probably

1:17:15 going to want to avail themselves of the locker room facilities

1:17:20 before they go on to school.

1:17:22 So it’s available, just discouraged. But we do want to make sure

1:17:26 that our coaches are

1:17:27 really monitoring how many people are going in and using those

1:17:33 things. Travel I have spoken

1:17:35 about, we are going to follow the same bus transportation

1:17:39 guidelines as we have in the

1:17:41 return to school plan. And I think that could be everybody’s

1:17:44 kind of kind of running through

1:17:46 their head as we start talking about athletic decisions. The

1:17:50 very first document that we

1:17:51 go back to is what does it say in the return to school plan, we

1:17:55 can’t have one rule for

1:17:56 for instruction and another rule for athletics. Game day staff,

1:18:01 we wanted to make sure that

1:18:02 our officials understood that when they come on to our campuses,

1:18:05 and they are working with

1:18:06 us that we hold them to the same standards that we do our

1:18:10 coaches and our kids. And our

1:18:12 venues are going to be Oh, there it is, our venues, we wanted to

1:18:17 make sure to take care

1:18:18 of letting our cheerleaders, our dance teams, our mascots all

1:18:22 know they’re welcome, but

1:18:24 they are not welcome in the small area in which our players are,

1:18:29 are to be. So for example,

1:18:31 on a sideline, there’s a box along the football sideline, and

1:18:34 the players have to stay in

1:18:36 that box. We don’t need any extra people in there. We don’t need

1:18:39 we don’t need the cheerleaders

1:18:41 in there. We don’t need we don’t need anybody else in there. So

1:18:44 we’re going to make sure

1:18:45 that that that we practice social distancing as best we can on

1:18:49 the sidelines as well. Venues

1:18:52 are going to be filled to 25% capacity, and schools are going to

1:18:55 be monitoring that and

1:18:57 figuring that out. We are going to ask spectators who come to

1:19:01 attest that they are they are

1:19:04 answering the COVID verbal screening questions. They these

1:19:07 questions will be posted at each

1:19:09 venue. We are asking spectators to wear face coverings. We are

1:19:17 telling spectators they

1:19:19 are not allowed on the fields during the during events before or

1:19:23 after the events. And if

1:19:25 they are congregating in a small area, we are asking them to

1:19:28 move away from one another

1:19:30 in those areas. Just like some other events that we have had, we

1:19:37 are asking our spectators

1:19:38 to practice social distancing in the stands, they can stay with

1:19:42 their direct family parties.

1:19:43 But other than that, we want them to be socially distancing. And

1:19:47 we are going to make sure

1:19:48 that there’s signage about that. So, like Andrew said, we are

1:19:52 going to have a sports

1:19:53 Pacific guideline meeting starting tomorrow. And we believe we

1:19:57 have all the right people

1:19:58 in the room for that. This is the wrong I sent the right

1:20:04 PowerPoint slide. And then

1:20:06 no, let me correct I sent the wrong PowerPoint slide, which is

1:20:09 this one and then I sent the

1:20:10 right PowerPoint slide and then I opened the wrong one. So I do

1:20:14 we do have marching band

1:20:16 guidelines. The one that I will send you will make sure that you

1:20:19 have that so that you are

1:20:20 able to see what the marching band guidelines are. In fact, I

1:20:22 think the one I sent you had

1:20:24 the right one the marching band guidelines. Finally, the middle

1:20:28 school I’ve had a lot

1:20:29 of questions about middle school. Andrew’s been working with the

1:20:32 athletic directors for

1:20:33 the past two days. They we now have 16 athletic middle school

1:20:38 athletic directors that have

1:20:40 100% consensus on what the plan is. So we’re going to be

1:20:44 bringing that to Dr. Mullins to

1:20:46 tomorrow, and I’m sure he’ll be sharing it out to you. But what

1:20:50 I really wanted to end

1:20:51 with was the work that our coaches and our athletic directors

1:20:59 have to do. So as many

1:21:01 of you are aware, as well as having athletics fall under student

1:21:05 services, so so too does

1:21:07 the Department of Health and much of our COVID response. And so

1:21:13 we have been actively involved

1:21:16 in what it looks like when we have a case, what it looks like

1:21:20 when we have a contact

1:21:22 to a case and the impact that it might have on our buildings.

1:21:27 And so what what is absolutely

1:21:29 essential is that our coaches can tell us who’s playing and

1:21:37 where and when. Our athletic

1:21:40 directors are able to get that information to us quickly. And

1:21:45 that our parents, when

1:21:46 their children are ill, don’t send them to school. Or when there

1:21:50 is a case in the home,

1:21:53 they don’t send them to school. When you talk about a case in a

1:22:00 school, our schools have

1:22:02 been set up to really minimize the impact of that case on the

1:22:07 school. If they’re practicing

1:22:10 social distancing, and we have a case in the school, one or two

1:22:15 kids might be impacted

1:22:17 if we’re following all of our guidelines. It might be more

1:22:21 depending on what kind of

1:22:22 activities are going on in that school or the type of class. But

1:22:27 when you’re talking

1:22:28 about sports, one student is going to impact 20 to 30 to 50

1:22:34 students. And so everything

1:22:37 that we put in place is to minimize that from happening. But one

1:22:44 student showing up for

1:22:45 the good of the team, one parent wanting to see their child play

1:22:50 in a crosstown rival

1:22:51 game will shut a program down for a minimum of three weeks, two

1:22:56 weeks for quarantine and

1:22:58 one week for conditioning. And so it behooves all of our parents,

1:23:03 all of our coaches, all

1:23:04 of our athletic directors, to really understand that the pieces

1:23:09 that were put into place were

1:23:11 put into place in order to keep kids playing and safe and

1:23:17 healthy. But most, okay, healthy

1:23:21 is most important. But second to that, is to keep our schools

1:23:26 open and running and instructing.

1:23:30 Because those 20 to 30 to 40 athletes who are impacted are also

1:23:36 students in our buildings,

1:23:39 and they will be quarantined from instruction. They will be home

1:23:44 and we will end up waiting

1:23:46 to see if there’s a breakthrough case which could possibly close

1:23:50 a school. So we take

1:23:52 these things very seriously. I’ve spoken to the athletic

1:23:55 directors about taking it all

1:23:56 very seriously. And I know based on their reaction that they do,

1:24:01 based on the work they

1:24:03 did over the summer that they do. And I think that’s – I don’t

1:24:09 want to stop this presentation

1:24:12 on a negative note, but I think it’s actually positive that our

1:24:16 coaches and our principals

1:24:18 and our athletic directors understand the trust that our

1:24:23 community has put in them and

1:24:25 have stepped up to that plate. And we will continue to monitor

1:24:29 that and address each

1:24:30 issue as it arises and make sure that we are protecting the

1:24:34 safety and health of our whole

1:24:37 community by doing so.

1:24:42 » Thank you so much, Ms. Moore. Any board members have

1:24:44 questions or comments? Ms. McDougall?

1:24:45 » Well, first I want to thank you and all of our athletic

1:24:48 directors and our coaches,

1:24:50 because I have been communicating with them at various times. So

1:24:53 thank you very much.

1:24:54 Could you please once again tell our community where they will

1:24:58 find this information? I just

1:25:00 want to make sure that they – because I have people say, “I can’t

1:25:02 find something.” So if

1:25:04 you could just again let our community know where to find this.

1:25:07 » Well, sure. As soon as I make sure I have the right one, we’ll

1:25:11 be posting it on our

1:25:12 student services page. Right now, it’s going to be just posted

1:25:16 on the board agenda, and

1:25:17 then we’re going to be posting it on the student services page.

1:25:19 So if you go to the student

1:25:20 services page, we’ll make sure it’s up front and center on that

1:25:23 page. I know that one of

1:25:24 the things Andrew said on his first day here was, “How come I

1:25:28 don’t have an athletics page?”

1:25:30 And I said, “I don’t know. Why don’t you make one?” So I know

1:25:34 that that’s in his list. Unfortunately,

1:25:36 we’ve kept him really hopping since his first day here. So as

1:25:41 soon as he gets a little breathing

1:25:42 room, he’ll – he is going to add an athletic page attached to

1:25:45 our student services page.

1:25:47 » Great. Thank you.

1:25:48 » Can we also ask Ms. Hensley to post that on the COVID –

1:25:51 [ Inaudible ]

1:26:00 » And I know for a fact she has the right one, so that’s good.

1:26:04 » Mr. Susan, I think you had questions for Ms. Martin.

1:26:08 » Yeah. Thank you so much for the time. I really appreciate it.

1:26:13 You did kind of skip

1:26:14 over the marching band guidelines. Can you – since the public’s

1:26:17 watching, can you kind

1:26:18 of walk us through that?

1:26:20 » Yes, if you let me load them.

1:26:21 » Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I don’t know if you just want to do

1:26:24 it from a 30,000-foot

1:26:25 view.

1:26:26 » Listen, I – listen, there’s so much going through this brain

1:26:27 right now. I try not to

1:26:28 store any of it.

1:26:32 » In the interim, while Ms. Moore is pulling up the additional

1:26:36 PowerPoint presentation,

1:26:38 Andrew, I would just like to say welcome very much to the team

1:26:41 and thank you for not turning

1:26:43 around and running when you realized the insane time that you

1:26:46 were joining that particular

1:26:48 team. We appreciate all that you’re doing because we certainly

1:26:51 do understand the impact

1:26:53 of athletics to our ability to educate students as a whole. And

1:26:57 so we appreciate all the support

1:26:58 that you’re giving to our school-based athletic directors and

1:27:01 coaches and making sure that

1:27:03 we can do this as safely as possible. Thank you so very much.

1:27:06 » Andrew, that’s all great, what she just said, but is that an

1:27:09 FSU mask you’re wearing?

1:27:10 Okay, that’s much better than everything she just said. Thank

1:27:13 you.

1:27:14 » Priorities.

1:27:15 » I think that was his introduction to Dr. Mullins as well. So

1:27:20 I’m going to slow down

1:27:22 and talk about marching band a little bit. Thank you for forcing

1:27:26 me to go back in, and

1:27:27 it is in the presentation. So as some of you guys who have had

1:27:32 students in band know, not

1:27:34 all of them want to march, but they all have to march. It is

1:27:39 part of the curriculum of

1:27:40 band. And so this year and this year only, marching is going to

1:27:46 be optional for students.

1:27:49 We don’t want parents to get used to that. It is part of the

1:27:51 program. It is part of the

1:27:52 curriculum. It is the expectation, but for this year and this

1:27:56 year only. Band directors

1:27:58 in consultation with their principals will have the opportunity

1:28:00 to consult about their

1:28:01 level of participation, meaning how many kids are going to go

1:28:05 out onto the field or not,

1:28:07 how many performances they’re going to do or not. Every single

1:28:12 band program is different.

1:28:15 And some are going to be heavily, you know, they may have a

1:28:18 great drum section and they

1:28:20 may want to go everywhere because drum is safe and, you know,

1:28:23 there’s no respiratory

1:28:25 droplets in drum. And so they’re going to work a different

1:28:28 program than maybe a school

1:28:30 that has a heavy horn section. And I’ve just pretty much

1:28:33 exhausted my knowledge of musical

1:28:35 instruments. So jump in anytime you want. You did pretty good.

1:28:43 We are going to maintain

1:28:44 social distancing guidelines per the instrument used. Our new

1:28:49 music person, I don’t know that

1:28:50 she’s been introduced to you guys. Her name is Minnie Orr. She,

1:28:55 yes. Oh, there you go.

1:28:59 Great choice. She’s wonderful. I will tell you, she came down to

1:29:03 my office. She was smart.

1:29:04 She was decisive. She was on it. She had great feedback from the

1:29:10 band directors and most

1:29:12 of this, the vast majority of it came from recommendations from

1:29:16 the band directors. So

1:29:18 she has been using the UC Boulder study for determining what the

1:29:22 guidelines are going

1:29:23 to be per instrument. And so that has already been shared with

1:29:28 our marching bands. Each

1:29:29 school is going to have to determine how they’re sitting and

1:29:32 performing in the stands. You

1:29:34 know, some bands are really bigger than others and they may want

1:29:38 to be in the stands. Some

1:29:40 may want to be on the field. Some may want to come out and

1:29:43 perform and leave. So, you

1:29:45 know, it’s hard for us to dictate that from on high. And so we

1:29:48 want our band directors

1:29:49 to work with our schools in determining that. Although

1:29:53 volunteers are prohibited with the

1:29:55 reopening plan, we do ask that our teams have a chaperone of one

1:30:00 to, I think it’s one to

1:30:02 10, if my memory serves me correctly, because these kids are

1:30:06 going to be in the stands and

1:30:07 they do need to be, I mean, they’re lovely. Band kids are lovely,

1:30:11 but you know, all kids

1:30:12 when they get together need a little supervision. And so we are

1:30:16 going to allow chaperones for

1:30:18 those events. Listen, I don’t know what protective coverings for

1:30:25 bells of brass and wood instruments

1:30:27 are, but many did. And so we will make sure that we use those.

1:30:34 We will ask that marching

1:30:35 bands wear masks at all times when playing wind instruments,

1:30:38 when social distancing is

1:30:40 not possible. Again, Mr. Susan, I have no idea what that looks

1:30:44 like, but many seemed

1:30:46 certain that it could happen and I trust her. Band directors

1:30:50 will work with principals on

1:30:51 the schedule for custodial services, because as you guys know,

1:30:57 when a band performs at

1:30:58 a halftime show, they take up, you know, the band room, the

1:31:02 chorus room, the hallway, and

1:31:05 then they’re out at the football game the entire time and they

1:31:07 may still be in those

1:31:09 same rooms at 11 p.m. So we really want our band directors to

1:31:12 work with our principals

1:31:13 to say, “I need a custodial staff, you know, to be in here first

1:31:17 thing Monday morning,

1:31:18 because I’m going to have kids in here first thing Monday

1:31:20 morning.” And so we have asked

1:31:22 for that to happen. We do know that bands run concession. We

1:31:27 wanted them to be able

1:31:28 to continue to do so if they desire to do so, but we do want

1:31:31 them to coordinate with

1:31:33 BPS food services to determine if there’s any new food safety

1:31:38 guidelines. Period at

1:31:41 the end of that sentence. And bands will not be going to away

1:31:45 games. And that was by consensus

1:31:47 with the band directors. So that’s what we have right now for

1:31:51 band. I will tell you that

1:31:52 with all things COVID, and I consider this COVID, as we get into

1:31:56 it, we discover things

1:31:58 that we missed, things that we forgot, things that we have to

1:32:01 ruminate on. This was no different.

1:32:03 We put this out and immediately I got a text that said, “Hey,

1:32:05 what about middle school

1:32:06 sports?” And I acted like I remembered. And then I said, “Hey,

1:32:10 listen, we’re on it.

1:32:12 We’re on it. We’re talking about it tomorrow.” And we did. And

1:32:15 we were. And we have a plan

1:32:16 ready to go by tomorrow.

1:32:18 » Awesome. So I had a quick question because this came up and

1:32:22 part of the discussion was

1:32:23 if I’m a coach that’s normally on board at the band and I’m not

1:32:28 paid, are we allowing

1:32:30 – sometimes like on football, we had coaches that literally

1:32:33 were just great guys. They

1:32:35 said, “Hey, I don’t need to take a supplement.” They’d been

1:32:38 there 10 years. And I’m sure it’s

1:32:40 the same way in the band. Are we allowing that to be the chaperone?

1:32:44 » Chaperone is determined by the band director as it fits

1:32:46 within our district security guidelines.

1:32:48 » Okay. And then in the event that there’s a way that – say

1:32:53 that the issue is, is that

1:32:55 – and I’m just speaking out. One of the things we used to do

1:32:59 was you could take and divide

1:33:00 your supplements, I think. So like if I’m a – if you wanted to

1:33:05 give two coaches on

1:33:06 the freshman staff, you could give them one of the freshman

1:33:09 supplements and divide it

1:33:10 in half maybe. Would that signify if they wanted to divide one

1:33:13 of the supplements to

1:33:15 allow more people to be a part of the band?

1:33:17 » I would have to refer that question to Dr. Thetty.

1:33:19 » Okay. But that is the – I guess that’s the difference is

1:33:21 that you’re saying that

1:33:22 unless they’re paid, they’re out. But if they are paid a

1:33:25 supplement that they can be a part

1:33:26 of the band.

1:33:28 » Well, they’re really – I don’t want to get into supplements,

1:33:32 but I – they’re – they

1:33:36 do have a supplement for an assistant band director and for a

1:33:39 band director, but oftentimes

1:33:41 what they’re paying in band is not a supplement. It’s a stipend

1:33:45 based on instrument and they

1:33:47 pay somebody to come in and help. It’s not a supplement through

1:33:51 our HR.

1:33:52 » Yeah. Sorry. I just thought of that while you were doing that.

1:33:54 And then the decision’s

1:33:55 left up to the school on what they want to put on their field,

1:33:58 what they want to do.

1:33:59 That’s all up to the school. And from what I’m sounding like, it

1:34:01 sounds like there’s

1:34:02 only going to be one band that actually plays at every game

1:34:05 because the visiting team’s

1:34:07 no longer going to be traveling.

1:34:08 » That is correct.

1:34:09 » Okay. And then – okay. So that’s good on marching band. Now

1:34:13 we all know that 25%

1:34:15 is going to reduce the cost and we’re going to be in a financial

1:34:18 need for our athletic

1:34:19 programs. And we know that football pays for all the other

1:34:22 athletic programs. Dr. Mullins,

1:34:24 you want to speak to where we’re going with that?

1:34:26 » Yes. I’ve already met with Ms. Moore and we’re looking at

1:34:29 analyzing gate receipts from

1:34:31 past years and the projected costs of this season because it’s

1:34:35 shorter and truncated

1:34:37 and not as comprehensive. So we’re doing an analysis to

1:34:40 determine what assistance our

1:34:42 teams would need to accommodate this season.

1:34:47 » Got it. And then what time would that – just as an idea,

1:34:50 maybe you don’t have an answer,

1:34:52 but I know that a lot of the operational needs of each one of

1:34:56 these athletic programs is

1:34:58 pretty quick, right? So if there’s any way to make those

1:35:01 decisions based upon the need

1:35:02 of the schools on what they’re going to get, you know what I

1:35:05 mean? That would be good too.

1:35:07 » Well, just as a reminder, all of our schools start off

1:35:10 without those gates. So they are

1:35:13 – they’re operating now as they always have on last year’s

1:35:16 funds. So they’re not starting

1:35:18 behind other than they wouldn’t have had spring gate.

1:35:22 » Right.

1:35:23 » But as you said, spring gate doesn’t drive athletic programs.

1:35:27 It’s fall gate.

1:35:28 » Absolutely.

1:35:29 » And so, yeah, they’re not operating from behind right now,

1:35:32 but they will be as they

1:35:34 move into the winter sports.

1:35:35 » One of the issues, though, that I would bring to the

1:35:38 attention is that they haven’t

1:35:39 been able to fundraise at all. And our booster clubs are the

1:35:42 ones that drive the cost. I

1:35:44 mean, if we look at the athletic budget and the gate as a

1:35:47 percentage of what the athletics

1:35:48 and activities are playing, it’s a small fraction of what they

1:35:51 go and fundraise for, right?

1:35:53 And they haven’t been able to fundraise at all. So literally,

1:35:55 they’re flat lined right

1:35:56 now. Programs, everything. So I know that in a normal

1:36:00 environment, we would wait until

1:36:02 the gates and everything else, but there is a sense of urgency.

1:36:05 And I know, Andrew, you

1:36:06 know about that and everything else. And I’m sure those athletic

1:36:08 directors, they’re like

1:36:09 the Somali warlords. I know that they make their issues needed.

1:36:14 But if it’s a board,

1:36:16 I would say that that would be an issue for me.

1:36:18 » And then 25%, are we sticking there? Or is there like a

1:36:22 metric that says that we can

1:36:23 open it to 50? I had some questions on that. I didn’t know what

1:36:26 your thoughts were there.

1:36:27 » Just like the reopening plan, we’re going to be evaluating it

1:36:30 this semester.

1:36:31 » Okay, so each semester might be an opportunity or throughout,

1:36:35 hey, we can move, open it.

1:36:36 Okay. And then the temperature checks was interesting. Are they

1:36:40 allowed to opt out of

1:36:41 that? Or is that something that they’re forced to do?

1:36:44 » Yeah, this is an extracurricular activity. So they are

1:36:47 choosing to participate as opposed

1:36:48 to a school, which they are mandated by state law to participate

1:36:52 in. So yeah, we are doing

1:36:54 temperature checks.

1:36:55 » Okay. And then you were right about when you talked about the

1:36:59 ringworm from FSU, or

1:37:00 I’m sorry, when you talked about the ringworm, FSU said, what

1:37:05 they had said was they have

1:37:07 not done anything in the last eight years differently to deal

1:37:11 with the COVID. They are

1:37:12 doing the exact same thing that they’ve done in the past. So I

1:37:15 did want to say that you’re

1:37:16 100% right. But it brings me to the other level is that we need

1:37:21 to make sure because

1:37:22 I know that the, I mean, ringworm, staff, everything that’s

1:37:25 inside those things, some

1:37:27 of these kids don’t wash their uniforms for like weeks. And they,

1:37:30 I mean, are we going

1:37:32 to be able to allow them as part of the COVID revenue to

1:37:35 purchase the cleaning and the sanitizing

1:37:38 and all the stuff that they need inside there? Are we allowing

1:37:41 the athletic teams COVID money

1:37:42 for those sanitation needs?

1:37:45 » We did not budget that, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t

1:37:49 look at it with new funds.

1:37:51 » Do you need anything, do we need to have a discussion?

1:37:55 Because when I was looking at

1:37:56 that, that seemed like one of the areas that was a cause for

1:37:59 concern for me was them not

1:38:01 having the needs and things that they have inside that room to

1:38:04 sanitize because those

1:38:05 kids coming in, one of the things that FSU does is that they use

1:38:08 a mister and everything

1:38:10 else.

1:38:11 » Yeah, I want to clarify, I’m sorry. And I don’t mean to

1:38:13 interrupt because I was in

1:38:14 my brain, I was still on the dirty laundry piece. But yes, they,

1:38:19 we actually did budget

1:38:21 for additional cleaning supplies for sports. We matter of fact,

1:38:26 the way we even figured

1:38:28 out how much to, how many thermometers to give and how many was

1:38:32 based on kind of sports

1:38:34 and what was happening in the summer. So yeah, they do have

1:38:37 supplies. I imagine they’re going

1:38:39 to need more supplies. The schools have gotten a separate budget.

1:38:43 And again, we just got

1:38:44 some additional CARES Act money that may or may not, I don’t

1:38:48 know where we’re at with

1:38:50 that. When is that due, Dr. Sullivan, do you know? She’s not

1:38:58 happy with me. I’m sorry,

1:39:00 Dr. Sullivan.

1:39:01 » It’s okay, I didn’t mean to.

1:39:02 » I’m giving her an evil eye, that’s true.

1:39:03 » She is, I’m so sorry.

1:39:04 » So the cleaning allocations and supplies were by schools,

1:39:07 primarily by classrooms and

1:39:08 by space. And so we would expect that all schools would use

1:39:15 their general COVID related

1:39:18 things in spaces like weight rooms and things like that, because

1:39:24 that’s part of the school

1:39:26 experience. And so there was not an extra allocation for

1:39:31 athletics in, out of our CARES

1:39:33 Act, because it was not designed that way, the CARES Act was

1:39:37 primarily for resuming school.

1:39:41 Separately we did receive CARES Act number five a week ago that

1:39:47 was designed to offset

1:39:49 the DOE’s over expectation that much of PPE could be reimbursed

1:39:58 by FEMA. Last Thursday,

1:40:00 Dr. Mullins, they recognized that they overstated that and

1:40:06 basically were wrong. And so we received

1:40:11 a much smaller allocation right now. Our BPS allocation is about

1:40:17 771,000 and I have about

1:40:20 1.6 million already encumbered. And so basically we’ll be moving

1:40:26 some of what we expected from

1:40:28 FEMA reimbursement over to the CARES Act number five, which we

1:40:32 are affectionately calling

1:40:35 the CPR fund, but that’s gonna really offset some of what we’ve

1:40:41 already purchased. I’m

1:40:43 sorry, one more, that being said, Ms. Moore is correct. The

1:40:46 schools were given individual

1:40:49 allocations to buy additional supplies and we’ve bought tons of

1:40:53 them and wanted to remind

1:40:55 you that each school did get a MRSA and so there would be no

1:40:58 reason why that school shouldn’t

1:41:00 use those MRSA in those common spaces like the band rooms and

1:41:02 the locker rooms and things

1:41:04 like that. So those spaces aren’t excluded. In our mind, they’re

1:41:08 part of the school. So

1:41:10 we would expect them to be using those MRSA quite regularly in

1:41:14 those large common spaces.

1:41:16 - Thank you. Yeah, ‘cause when we had an outbreak at Space Coast

1:41:19 and we decided that we were,

1:41:20 this was not an outbreak of COVID, but back in the day we had

1:41:22 staff and we had some other

1:41:24 stuff and the coaches were using buckets of bleach and it rusted

1:41:27 out all the clips. As

1:41:28 long as we’re not going that route and a lot of them have the

1:41:30 available things that they

1:41:31 need to do it properly, I commend you.

1:41:34 - So I just wanted to say, although Dr. Sullivan gave me the

1:41:37 evil eye, I think it should be

1:41:39 said, she has borne the heavy load of the CARES Act and the next

1:41:45 CARES and the next

1:41:46 CARES and the next CARES and nobody knows it better than she

1:41:50 does. So I defer to her

1:41:51 expertise. She has been outstanding.

1:41:54 - Awesome. And then I think one of the things that I noticed is

1:41:57 that when I was coaching

1:41:59 before, some of the kids, just for something to keep an eye on,

1:42:02 some of the kids, that

1:42:04 was the only shower they got and they needed that. So if we don’t

1:42:10 make it so hard on them,

1:42:12 some of those kids, that’s all they went before they go home.

1:42:15 They bring their clothes. So

1:42:16 just something to think about. And then I’d also like possibly

1:42:19 in the next school board

1:42:21 meeting to talk about the media, I would like to talk about what

1:42:25 access that looks like

1:42:26 and everything else, because we have some really good programs

1:42:29 all the way from Florida

1:42:31 today and other options that would like to cover some of our

1:42:33 sports and being the fact

1:42:34 that now 25% aren’t out there, we need to give them as many

1:42:37 options as possible. That’s

1:42:38 all. So just something to think about and I’m good. And I wanted

1:42:41 to say thank you for

1:42:42 everything that you put together. Thanks for keeping our kids

1:42:46 playing and trying to come

1:42:47 up with options to keep them safe. Thank you.

1:42:52 » Thank you, Mr. Susan. Any other? Ms. Campbell?

1:42:55 » So first of all, since the question was asked, how is band

1:42:58 going to work, I’ll just

1:43:00 tell you that I just got a text from my daughter a little while

1:43:02 ago. Hey, Mom, on the way home,

1:43:03 can you pick up some hosiery to go over the end of my instrument?

1:43:07 And then our band directors

1:43:09 are being very creative and having mothers and families, I’m

1:43:12 going to say mothers could

1:43:14 be fathers too, families so little bags to picture clarinet and

1:43:20 saxophone in. It’s very

1:43:22 interesting. You should Google it. It’s wild. Oh, and also, Mom,

1:43:26 I need a mask so that I

1:43:27 can cut a slit in so I can play my instrument through the slit.

1:43:30 So they’re getting very

1:43:31 creative and all that is based off the Boulder study that has

1:43:35 been waking its way around

1:43:37 all the music programs. So thank you. I don’t necessarily have a

1:43:41 question, but I just want

1:43:43 to add to what you said. I very much appreciate the athletic

1:43:49 directors and the coaches taking

1:43:50 this seriously. I just want to put out the challenge to our

1:43:54 students and families. Because

1:43:57 the truth is, there is what we must do as a district, which is

1:44:00 educate kids, and there’s

1:44:01 what we don’t really have to do, which is athletics. But it is

1:44:07 very important. You know,

1:44:10 I’m a band orchestra choir mom, but those are extracurriculars

1:44:14 as well. And I understand

1:44:15 the value of our kids’ belongings and learning the team and

1:44:19 adulting and all kinds of things

1:44:21 that they learn. And so, but I just, you know, we’ve, I’ve had

1:44:25 some comments, oh, hey, well,

1:44:27 if the NBA and the NFL and NCAA, well, let’s just talk about

1:44:31 some numbers. Just so you

1:44:32 know, my husband’s a huge sports fan, so he was a good resource

1:44:35 for me. The NBA is spending

1:44:36 $150 million to be in their bubble in Orlando. The NFL has boatloads

1:44:42 of money, and they have

1:44:43 put their own testing site at all 32 team sites. And so they

1:44:48 test every day, and they

1:44:50 test, you know, and they’re going through all that and getting

1:44:52 the results back immediately.

1:44:53 So, you know, money, right? And they’re adults, and they can,

1:44:58 that’s their focus. The NCAA,

1:45:00 I actually was really pleased to see several interviews in the

1:45:04 last few weeks of some college

1:45:05 athletes and coaches. I won’t mention the teams, because I don’t

1:45:10 know why I need to

1:45:11 boo. But one of them was Alabama. But who talked about what they’re

1:45:16 doing. These athletes

1:45:17 want to play so badly, they want this season to come off here in

1:45:21 the SEC and the ACC, who

1:45:22 are actually having a season, that they have said, we go to

1:45:26 class, we go to practice, and

1:45:29 we go home. And they’re taking it seriously, because they want

1:45:32 to play so bad, they know

1:45:33 how serious it is. And so they’re going to class, they’re going

1:45:37 to practice, and they’re

1:45:38 going home. And I’d like to think that our high school athletes

1:45:41 and our middle school

1:45:42 athletes would have the same level of seriousness. That’s a lot

1:45:48 of faith. So we’re going to take,

1:45:50 it’s going to take our families to join them. And the other

1:45:52 thing is our college athletes,

1:45:53 when they go, when they say they go home, they generally go to

1:45:57 live, you know, to their

1:45:58 apartment where they live by themselves or their dorm, or they

1:46:00 go to an athletic dorm,

1:46:01 like football players all live and study and work together. They’re

1:46:06 not going back to families

1:46:07 who are all, in general, who are also going all different places.

1:46:11 So I just, so that our

1:46:13 athletes and our families really understand the impact that they

1:46:16 would have, they could

1:46:17 actually shorten their season or eliminate it, or, you know,

1:46:22 worse, have a disruption

1:46:24 to our schools. We just, I just implore all our athletes and

1:46:28 their families to take this

1:46:30 absolutely serious, because if we want to have this, we want to

1:46:33 have it successfully,

1:46:35 it is going to be dependent on their behavior, not only in

1:46:38 practice and on the field, but

1:46:41 at home. And so please take your cue from our professional and

1:46:44 college level athletes

1:46:46 and just realize what you do outside of school and outside of

1:46:50 practice is greatly going to

1:46:52 affect how we do school and how we do practice and games. And so

1:46:57 I just really want our families

1:47:00 all the ones who have contacted me, I’ve tried to add that into

1:47:03 my email. If there’s some

1:47:04 I’ve got still sitting in my inbox, just say, “Hey, we need you.

1:47:07 We need you to help. If

1:47:08 this is going to be successful, you’ve got to be on board.” So,

1:47:11 but thank you, thank

1:47:13 you for the work that you have done and your team and your new

1:47:17 protege here, right, for

1:47:19 all things athletics and student services. Very much appreciate

1:47:22 the work that you’ve

1:47:23 done with them. Thank you, Ms. Campbell. Anyone else have

1:47:30 questions, comments for Ms. Moore?

1:47:30 I will just say thank you so very much. I know that you have

1:47:35 been, you’ve been carrying

1:47:37 a lot through this and I know you’ve been very dedicated to

1:47:41 making sure that we are

1:47:43 making the decisions that keep us as safe as possible. So we

1:47:47 appreciate you. All right.

1:47:51 We are now at public comments in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

1:47:55 Speakers could record

1:47:56 comments through advanced registration or maybe here in person.

1:47:59 If we already have 30

1:48:01 public attendees inside the boardroom, additional speakers may

1:48:04 be waiting outside, which I do

1:48:05 not believe we do. So we have seven speakers scheduled in person

1:48:13 this evening, and then

1:48:13 we have one recorded comment. So our first three speakers will

1:48:18 be Robert Ray, Brian Watts

1:48:19 and Anthony Colucci. Mr. Ray, if you’d like to approach the

1:48:22 microphone in the center please,

1:48:25 sir. Dr. Mullins and thank you. I’m Robert Ray. I’m one of your

1:48:33 substitute teachers.

1:48:34 And the last time I was here, I asked what can we do to prepare

1:48:38 better. And Dr. Headey

1:48:40 and her team prepared a beautiful PowerPoint presentation just

1:48:44 in time for us to start

1:48:46 the work. Anyway, so thank you for that PowerPoint presentation.

1:48:49 It really helped out. I just

1:48:51 thought I’d tell you a little bit about what happened the last

1:48:53 two days. I’m on an extended

1:48:55 AP history assignment over at Cocoa Beach High. And first of all,

1:49:00 my room, it was really

1:49:02 fantastic. There were 21 desks. They were nicely placed apart.

1:49:07 And I took a measurement

1:49:08 of the room and it was 30 by 30. So it was really good. And it

1:49:12 was more than adequate

1:49:13 for all the students that I had. And I was really pleased when I

1:49:16 went in this morning.

1:49:17 Everything had been cleaned very, very nicely. A few things had

1:49:21 been moved, but it was okay.

1:49:23 Also the 90-minute blocks that they’re doing for the secondary

1:49:26 schools is really, really

1:49:27 a very effective thing. It’s really nice to be able to stretch

1:49:31 out an activity and, you

1:49:32 know, for 90 minutes as opposed to what usually happened. The

1:49:37 masks, the kids have been fantastic

1:49:39 about the masks. A lot of peer pressure going on. If somebody

1:49:43 doesn’t have their mask on

1:49:44 like I don’t right now, the other kids will say, “Hey, you know,

1:49:47 put your mask on,” which

1:49:49 is really, really good. The sanitizers, there’s sanitizers in my

1:49:54 room and I’m really, I tell

1:49:56 the kids to use them. I’m not so certain that it’s really

1:50:00 happening all the way in all of

1:50:02 the areas of, I didn’t see much anyway. As far as social distancing

1:50:06 is concerned, very,

1:50:09 very good. The kids really take care to stay six feet apart. And

1:50:16 it’s really nice to be

1:50:18 back. Thank you. It’s been long since March. It’s just nice to

1:50:21 be working with kids again.

1:50:22 Thank you.

1:50:23 Thank you, Mr. Ray. All right, Mr. Watts.

1:50:31 Good afternoon. I recently applied for the substitute teacher

1:50:40 position. I’ve had some

1:50:44 issues with the process. Just wanted to be clear that I

1:50:49 substituted in Orlando so I thought

1:50:51 it would be challenging. I’m not doing anything. Haven’t worked

1:50:56 for a few years. I’m retired.

1:50:58 So it indicated that you needed supervisor references. And I was

1:51:06 advised that was a statute.

1:51:09 I had emails I traded with Beth Vetti and then she had, I also

1:51:16 spoke with Cordia Patterson.

1:51:20 So we got past the requirement for supervisors. The statute

1:51:26 doesn’t say that, but that’s fine.

1:51:28 So, then I had an issue with, I don’t have my high school

1:51:33 diploma. So I got a letter

1:51:35 emailed to me from my high school in New York and that was not

1:51:40 accepted. So I understand

1:51:43 you have a shortage of substitutes and I’m just advising you

1:51:47 that, you know, the pay

1:51:49 isn’t very high. I wasn’t doing it for the money, but, you know,

1:51:53 these little challenges

1:51:54 are going to make it difficult for almost anybody. So I’m

1:51:57 retired for a few years. I

1:51:59 was with the police department for over 30 years in New York. So

1:52:02 even getting supervisor

1:52:03 references, that wasn’t possible for that position. So I’m just

1:52:07 saying this is what

1:52:08 I’ve run into. So the application is probably going to be listed

1:52:13 as incomplete. I did the

1:52:14 online test, all of that stuff. So I just wanted to bring that

1:52:20 to your attention as

1:52:21 well as, well, the salaries. I wasn’t doing it for the money,

1:52:27 but the salary is just inadequate.

1:52:30 So I just wanted to mention that. Since I was here and I saw

1:52:33 your budget presentation,

1:52:35 I will say that that is a little concerning that you have an

1:52:40 actual and a projected difference

1:52:43 of 14,000 students. So I think the questions that some of you

1:52:48 folks are raising are legitimate.

1:52:50 So I hope the board, and I didn’t come here for this, but I hope

1:52:54 the board will be proactive.

1:52:57 And when you get real numbers, I mean, I think it’s a stretch to

1:53:00 think you’re going to find

1:53:01 13,000 students. So all I’m saying is, I know how budgeting

1:53:06 works and you don’t want to

1:53:08 wait until the last minute. You might want to start planning

1:53:13 because nobody likes surprises.

1:53:15 And I’m sure the districts don’t. I’m sure the students and the

1:53:17 teachers aren’t going

1:53:18 to be happy either. Taxes are fine. I’m okay with taxes going up

1:53:22 a little bit, but nobody

1:53:22 likes surprises. And I think that is a little area of concern.

1:53:27 Thank you. I appreciate it.

1:53:29 Thank you, Mr. Watts. We appreciate you coming. Mr. Colucci.

1:53:41 My name is Anthony Colucci. I’m the president of the Brevard

1:53:45 Federation of Teachers. Yesterday,

1:53:47 Judge Charles Dodson granted the Florida Education Association’s

1:53:51 motion for a temporary injunction

1:53:53 against Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran’s

1:53:57 executive order. In his decision,

1:54:00 the judge noted the order is unconstitutional to the extent it

1:54:04 arbitrarily disregards safety,

1:54:07 denies local school boards decision-making with respect to reopening

1:54:10 brick and mortar

1:54:11 schools, and conditions funding on an approved reopening plan

1:54:15 with a start date in August.

1:54:17 The judge noted that the evidence was clear that teachers want

1:54:20 to get back in school,

1:54:22 but teachers are being told they must go back into the classroom

1:54:26 in unsafe conditions. There

1:54:28 are some signs that the spread of COVID in Brevard is heading in

1:54:31 the right direction,

1:54:33 and that is good news. However, science tells us that with

1:54:37 schools reopening, our numbers

1:54:39 are likely to start heading in the wrong direction. While the

1:54:42 case will continue to be argued

1:54:44 in court, I’m calling on this board to direct staff to start

1:54:48 developing contingency plans

1:54:50 that could offer more than just brick and mortar or e-learning.

1:54:54 We strongly believe

1:54:55 that it is time for the board to have a staggered schedule plan

1:54:59 in place. If we get to a situation

1:55:02 where this board can actually decide for itself without the

1:55:05 state threatening to take funding,

1:55:07 a staggered schedule appears to be a way to offer mitigation

1:55:11 efforts such as social distancing,

1:55:13 bubbles, and contact tracing, while still providing some face-to-face

1:55:18 instruction and

1:55:19 the ability to meet students’ social, emotional, and physical

1:55:23 needs. We ask that this plan

1:55:25 was developed months ago, but it was overshadowed by the

1:55:28 governor and commissioner of education

1:55:30 bullying districts into five days a week of brick and mortar. Do

1:55:34 not wait. Develop this

1:55:36 plan in case our numbers start heading in the wrong direction. A

1:55:39 neutral judge said

1:55:41 five days a week disregards safety. Because this board chose to

1:55:46 comply with this order,

1:55:47 it can be said that you’ve disregarded safety. If, if FEA

1:55:51 ultimately prevails in the lawsuit,

1:55:54 the Brevard County School Board will not be able to point a

1:55:57 finger at the governor. It

1:55:58 will be solely your decision that puts kids and staff in harm’s

1:56:03 way. While we are still

1:56:04 in brick and mortar five days a week, I cannot stress enough,

1:56:07 not only to our teachers but

1:56:09 to our entire community, do not let your guards down. We are

1:56:13 smarter than the virus, but the

1:56:15 virus is more patient than we are. Wear your mask, social

1:56:19 distance, proper, practice proper

1:56:21 hygiene, and stay home if you’re sick. Thank you.

1:56:25 Thank you, Mr. Calucci. Next up, we have Mr. Savage, Ms. Skipper,

1:56:29 Mr. Hilliard, and then

1:56:31 our last in-person speaker will be Laura DePauw. Mr. Savage.

1:56:46 Do we have, could we get a white print, please? Nah, you’re good,

1:56:57 Ms. Belford. Thank you.

1:57:01 You can have my hand sanitizer when you’re done, Mr. Savage.

1:57:16 Thank you, Ms. Belford. Thank you, the board. Thank you, Dr.

1:57:19 Mullins. I needed that. I just

1:57:22 want to start out by saying my two sons started school yesterday

1:57:26 at Cape View Elementary and

1:57:28 I felt like a kindergarten parent all over again. I was nervous

1:57:32 that they were going

1:57:33 to be safe. I was nervous that they were going to have a good

1:57:36 time. I was nervous that they

1:57:38 were going to want to go back tomorrow. So I just want to give a

1:57:42 huge shout out to our

1:57:43 teachers in Brevard because they made my kids have a wonderful

1:57:46 day. I didn’t know what to

1:57:48 do on Tuesday. They knew they want to go back to school. And

1:57:50 because of our teachers, and

1:57:52 I know that just didn’t happen in two classrooms, that happened

1:57:55 in classrooms all throughout

1:57:56 Brevard. So a huge shout out to our teachers and the elementary

1:58:00 leader in learning, secondary

1:58:01 leader in learning has done a lot. Thank you. I’m going to

1:58:06 change up my speech a little

1:58:08 bit. Looking at those enrollment numbers, there’s a problem.

1:58:12 Like we can hope 13, 14,000

1:58:14 kids are coming back, but I’m a season ticket holder for Orlando

1:58:19 city. I still have season

1:58:20 tickets for this season. They’re sending me emails to try to go

1:58:23 to a game tomorrow. Guess

1:58:25 where I’m not going tomorrow? To a game because I don’t feel

1:58:28 safe. So we have to do everything

1:58:30 possible to make our schools feel safe. If we, we can argue if

1:58:35 COVID, the mortality rate

1:58:37 of COVID, how many people will die from COVID. It doesn’t matter.

1:58:40 If somebody doesn’t feel

1:58:41 safe, they’re not going to go to our schools. So I intended to

1:58:45 come up here and talk about

1:58:46 how in the CARES grant, there’s about $4 million that was just

1:58:51 held for the exact word and

1:58:53 was held for held in reserve at the state on our behalf so that

1:58:57 we can revisit once

1:58:59 the funding picture is more clear. We need to spend every dollar

1:59:03 available for PPE for

1:59:04 our class. Right now, I believe the district gets about 80%

1:59:08 reimbursement from FEMA on

1:59:10 PPE. Is that wrong now? You get zero. Dr. Sullivan can address

1:59:16 that directly. I’ll keep

1:59:17 speaking because I know that’s not appropriate. I’m sorry. We

1:59:21 need to be doing everything

1:59:22 possible. If a teacher needs best partitions, we need to be

1:59:25 looking at that. I do know every

1:59:27 teacher got one partition to start school, but I don’t think

1:59:30 that’s adequate. If teachers

1:59:31 need more thermometers, we need to be doing that. If we can

1:59:35 check temperatures for football,

1:59:36 I’m sure we can check temperatures on more of our students when

1:59:39 they come in. Because

1:59:40 at the end of the day, our families need to be safe. In some

1:59:43 ways, we need to look at

1:59:44 it as a rush on our business. If every student that comes in,

1:59:48 yes, we need to care for our

1:59:50 students, but on the budget side, that’s money. So we need to be

1:59:54 doing everything possible.

1:59:55 And I think missing that many students just says that our reopening

1:59:59 plan kind of missed

2:00:01 the point a little bit, and we need to revisit that and see how

2:00:04 we can attract parents. Thank

2:00:05 you.

2:00:06 - Thank you, Mr. Savage. We appreciate you. Ms. Skipper.

2:00:13 - Good evening, members of the board. First of all, I just want

2:00:22 to say that lawsuit win

2:00:25 wasn’t just our win. I feel like it was your win too, because

2:00:29 the one thing that really

2:00:31 irritated me about that executive order is I knew it was

2:00:34 unconstitutional because you

2:00:36 guys are elected to do a job and you were hamstringed into

2:00:40 making decisions when you

2:00:42 should have been able to do what was right for our district. But

2:00:45 that’s not actually

2:00:46 my speech tonight. Our teachers are doing what they probably

2:00:53 never imagined they would

2:00:55 do. And while they are all stepping up to the plate to do this

2:01:01 hybrid approach to e-learning

2:01:04 with kids in the classroom at the same time, I’m watching what’s

2:01:07 happening at home because

2:01:09 my son is doing e-learning. While at the same time I’m getting

2:01:13 phone calls and emails, teachers

2:01:15 are frustrated, not because they think it’s too much work, even

2:01:21 though they do, but because

2:01:24 they don’t believe that they’re going to be able to give their

2:01:28 students the same educational

2:01:30 experience that they have in the past. And they feel like those

2:01:35 kids that are e-learning

2:01:36 may be missing out because they’re not able to, in a sense, be

2:01:42 two places at once. We

2:01:45 could do a lot better for students and for teachers if we had a

2:01:52 complete one-to-one district

2:01:57 because the students in the classroom could be online with the

2:02:01 students at home using

2:02:03 Zoom and everybody could be having the same experience. I was a

2:02:09 little discouraged, although

2:02:12 I want to say I’m completely in support of renewing the half

2:02:15 cent. I was very discouraged

2:02:17 to hear that a good bit of that was not going to go to putting

2:02:22 one-to-one in our classrooms.

2:02:24 I want to read you a quote from the superintendent in

2:02:28 Indianapolis Public Schools who said this

2:02:31 about their decision to be ready to go one-to-one right now,

2:02:36 said this in March. “It’s a massive

2:02:39 investment, the right investment, but a massive investment. We

2:02:44 know that in the fall, we need

2:02:46 to be very nimble and flexible and prepared to exist in both a

2:02:51 virtual home learning world

2:02:52 and hopefully in our school facility world. And to do that well,

2:02:58 it requires each of our

2:03:00 students to have access to technology. We have students who are

2:03:05 getting computers sent

2:03:07 home to them for e-learning that don’t have webcams or audio. We

2:03:13 have a principal who

2:03:14 said if you don’t have a computer at home, then you should be

2:03:19 here attending school.

2:03:21 I don’t see how these parents are going to actually vote for

2:03:26 extending a tax if we’re

2:03:27 not actually providing things that we should be providing them

2:03:31 at home and making them

2:03:33 successful in the classroom and at home and making our teachers’

2:03:38 jobs not only easier,

2:03:40 but allow them to feel that they’re reaching every student.

2:03:42 Thank you.

2:03:42 - Thank you, Ms. Skipper. Mr. Hilliard.

2:03:48 - Good evening. I’m Jonathan Hilliard, second vice president of

2:03:56 the Brevard Federation of

2:03:57 Teachers. I really want to recognize our teacher heroes this

2:04:02 evening. They are the ones that

2:04:04 are the backbone of this entire situation that we’re dealing

2:04:08 with in our school systems.

2:04:10 They’re the ones that are making this whole thing work. The load

2:04:15 falls on them. I’d like

2:04:17 to read a quick leadership quote. It says, “One of the tests of

2:04:21 leadership is the ability

2:04:23 to recognize a problem before it becomes an emergency.” One of

2:04:30 the things that the leadership

2:04:31 that we provided from Brevard Federation of Teachers was 500 KN95

2:04:36 masks for our teachers

2:04:37 before they entered the school. We wanted to make sure our

2:04:41 teachers were protected.

2:04:42 We wanted to make sure that they felt safe going into harm’s way.

2:04:46 Another thing that

2:04:47 we did, we’re providing 150 plexiglass carousels, just like the

2:04:53 kind that we used to use with

2:04:55 FSA testing, the testing carousels about 24 inches high. We’re

2:05:00 going to provide these

2:05:01 so that resource teachers, ESC teachers can do one-to-one

2:05:06 instruction with our students

2:05:07 and provide that academic support. One of the other things that

2:05:13 is very concerning right

2:05:14 now, and Ms. Skipper had brought it up, is our teachers are

2:05:19 receiving computers without

2:05:22 audio or video capabilities. I had a teacher call me about this,

2:05:27 and she said this is how

2:05:28 she learned about it. She learned about it from a parent who

2:05:32 actually was an IT person,

2:05:33 and they said, “Do you know that the computer that you gave my

2:05:37 child doesn’t have video

2:05:38 capability or a speaker or a microphone?” She was like, “Well,

2:05:45 let me look into this.”

2:05:47 She looked into it, and she found out that the district said, “Oh

2:05:50 yes, we know that that’s

2:05:51 going out, but we expect you to just live chat with those kids.”

2:05:57 That’s the stress that

2:05:59 our teachers are under. Ms. Skipper alluded to it. What stresses

2:06:03 our teachers out the

2:06:04 most is their passion and desire to provide that high-quality

2:06:11 education to their students

2:06:14 that they’ve been accustomed to providing, but now they feel

2:06:18 hand-tied. That’s one issue

2:06:20 that’s going on. Another is the class size. I had a first-grade

2:06:27 teacher tell me, “Jonathan,

2:06:29 I have 24 kids face-to-face in my class.” She’s a veteran

2:06:37 teacher. She knows what she’s

2:06:38 getting into. She knows how to organize her classroom, but she

2:06:41 tells me, “I can’t do social

2:06:43 distancing, and these are six-year-old babies. We sing. I got

2:06:48 them trying to wear their masks,

2:06:50 but they can’t do it because they’re just six.” That’s what’s

2:06:54 going on right now. I’m

2:06:55 very happy that we’ve all been optimistic, but these are the

2:07:00 real concerns going on in

2:07:02 our schools right now with our teachers. We need that leadership

2:07:06 to see and recognize

2:07:08 that problem before it becomes an emergency. Thank you.

2:07:11 Thank you, Mr. Hilliard. Our final in-person speaker this

2:07:16 evening is Laura DePaul.

2:07:18 Thank you. Thank you for having me. I have waited months to be

2:07:39 here in front of you.

2:07:42 We are a Merritt Island family. I have three elementary-aged

2:07:46 children attending Tropical

2:07:48 Elementary this year in person. We moved to New Hampshire last

2:07:55 year for one year, and

2:07:57 while we were there, I started substitute teaching. I loved it.

2:08:02 I told myself I will

2:08:03 do it till my youngest, who starts kindergarten this month,

2:08:06 graduates. For the next 12, 13

2:08:11 years, she will be in school. I will be a substitute teacher for

2:08:15 you consistently. I

2:08:17 have a great background. I’m passionate about it. I have made so

2:08:22 many memories as a substitute

2:08:24 the one year I did it in New Hampshire that it made me want to

2:08:29 do it full-time, but I’m

2:08:31 not sure that the … I know you guys all know, but the general

2:08:36 public probably doesn’t

2:08:38 realize in Brevard County, I will get paid less than McDonald’s.

2:08:45 You base the pay on

2:08:47 your background in New Hampshire, and I’m not sure that anyone

2:08:51 would even know how other

2:08:52 states operate. They’re very fairly paid equally. It doesn’t

2:08:58 matter where you came from. If

2:08:59 you passed your background check and you’re reliable, they have

2:09:03 a flat pay. They pay $37.50

2:09:06 for a half day, $75 for a full day, and they offer full-day

2:09:10 substitutes, a free lunch.

2:09:12 I loved it. I was happy with that. I was a full-day sub. It wasn’t

2:09:17 big money, but it

2:09:19 was better than making minimum wage. I truly believe we are not

2:09:24 further from minimum wage.

2:09:27 Right now during coronavirus, something has changed. Low risk,

2:09:32 reliable substitute teachers

2:09:34 should be considered essential workers. There are teachers, I’m

2:09:39 being told, on Merritt Island

2:09:41 are looking for safer lines of work. I would show up and sub for

2:09:45 them every single day

2:09:46 confidently, but if you have a high school diploma for anyone

2:09:53 out there listening, families

2:09:56 at home, $8.56 an hour. Here’s the real shocker. I have an

2:10:02 associate’s degree, plenty of other

2:10:04 careers in the past. I was a stay-at-home mom. Now I want to be

2:10:07 part of the school district

2:10:08 and do more than just volunteer, but I’m making $8.75 an hour.

2:10:14 This is what bothers me. In

2:10:15 Brevard County, if I had a bachelor’s degree, most likely I’d be

2:10:20 looking for full-time work.

2:10:22 I know people, friends of mine, moms in the community, same

2:10:28 county as I, same availability,

2:10:31 making $4 more an hour. Why? Why am I getting paid $4 an hour

2:10:38 less than a bachelor’s degree?

2:10:41 But with a high school diploma, I’m making 20 cents more than a

2:10:45 high school diploma.

2:10:46 I can’t understand. There’s a shortage of subs. I’ve talked to

2:10:51 human resources-

2:10:53 - Ms. DePaul, thank you so much for joining us this evening. I’m

2:10:55 sorry, but we’re limited

2:10:56 to three minutes per speaker. That’s your alarm going off there.

2:11:00 - Oh my gosh. Okay. I hope you guys can come up with a solution.

2:11:04 - Thank you. And thank you for supporting our schools. We

2:11:08 appreciate it. Okay. And we

2:11:11 have one call-in speaker that we still need to hear from this

2:11:16 evening.

2:11:17 - In consideration of the current health and safety concerns

2:11:25 during the COVID-19 emergency

2:11:29 guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as

2:11:32 well as executive order

2:11:34 20-91 issued by Governor Sanders, it has been necessary to

2:11:37 modify our procedures for public

2:11:39 comment. Tonight, your comments will be recorded, and we will

2:11:42 play them back under the public

2:11:44 comment section of the board meeting tomorrow. Our speaker is

2:11:47 limited to three minutes. Our

2:11:48 moderator will keep track of your time and ask you to conclude

2:11:51 your comments when you

2:11:52 have reached three minutes. Always keep in mind that reasonable

2:11:55 decorum is expected at

2:11:56 all times. Please keep your comments appropriate for our

2:11:59 children who may be watching or listening

2:12:01 from home. Before speaking, please state your name, the

2:12:04 organization you represent, if any,

2:12:06 and identify the topic you will be discussing. We won’t be

2:12:08 answering questions on tonight’s

2:12:10 call, but our staff will follow up with you if you have a

2:12:13 question or need a response.

2:12:14 Ben, please go ahead with our speaker.

2:12:16 - All right. Thank you. So go ahead and press zero now, and

2:12:21 Donna will bring you through

2:12:22 to make your comment. Go ahead and press zero now, and Donna

2:12:24 will bring you through to make

2:12:25 your comment. Okay. Kathy, go ahead and state your first and

2:12:31 last name and your comment,

2:12:32 please.

2:12:33 - Yes. My name is Kathy West. My question is, right now, do they

2:12:43 plan on paying teachers

2:12:46 and staff for hazard pay because we’re going into the classroom

2:12:55 in a crisis situation where

2:12:59 we’re already in this situation, and this just adds to the issue.

2:13:08 And also, we’ve been

2:13:13 waiting on, subs have been waiting on a raise that we keep, we

2:13:19 are kept being told that

2:13:21 it’s on their radar. It’s been on their radar for a whole year.

2:13:25 There has been no pay increase

2:13:28 in that year. All I’ve heard is lip service for the past year.

2:13:33 Nothing has been done,

2:13:36 and now we’re in another crisis, facing two crises, and nothing’s

2:13:42 being done.

2:13:44 - Okay. Thank you very much for your comment. Go ahead, student,

2:13:49 close out.

2:13:50 - Okay. Thank you, Ms. West. I appreciate your comments tonight,

2:13:53 and we’ll play that

2:13:54 back for the school board tomorrow night’s meeting under the

2:13:57 public comment section.

2:13:58 Thank you very much. And thank you, Ben. Good night.

2:14:01 - Good night.

2:14:02 - All right. That concludes our public comments for this evening.

2:14:05 Did any board member wish

2:14:06 to respond, give direction, anything like that on any of the

2:14:12 public speakers this evening?

2:14:15 I will ask, Dr. Mullins, I’ll ask you, and since you are up here

2:14:19 and your mic is a little

2:14:20 bit clear, but if you need to punt to Dr. Sullivan, please feel

2:14:24 free. Mr. Savage had

2:14:25 brought up the FEMA reimbursement, and it was discussed a little

2:14:29 bit when Ms. Moore

2:14:30 was at the mic, but I think that’s kind of important for our

2:14:33 public to understand what

2:14:35 happened there with the FEMA reimbursement. Is that something

2:14:38 that you can speak to, or?

2:14:40 - Yeah. Well, I could give it an attempt, but Dr. Sullivan

2:14:44 certainly is most familiar

2:14:46 with the process. Essentially, we were led to believe that FEMA

2:14:49 would be reimbursing us

2:14:50 at 87 and a half percent of those purchases, and then we were

2:14:55 then told about a week, maybe

2:14:57 a week and a half ago by the state, that they didn’t anticipate

2:15:00 that that was going to come

2:15:01 through and that they were allocating additional dollars for us

2:15:04 to charge against. But it sounds

2:15:08 as though that now is being stepped back by the state as well.

2:15:11 Dr. Sullivan, do you want

2:15:11 to provide additional update?

2:15:12 - Yeah, you were pretty accurate, except that it was five days

2:15:18 ago that they told us. They

2:15:20 had originally in the information put out by the DOE had

2:15:24 recommended districts do a

2:15:26 split as we did and following that directive. And then on

2:15:31 Thursday in about a five minutes,

2:15:34 oh, by the way, mentioned, we now know that that’s not working,

2:15:38 so we’re putting out another

2:15:40 CARES Act grant and you’ll get it this afternoon. So we did

2:15:43 receive that this afternoon. We

2:15:45 are in the midst of writing that CARES Act grant and it will

2:15:52 offset about a little over

2:15:55 half of what we had anticipated from FEMA reimbursement. So at

2:16:02 this point, my expectation

2:16:04 is to convert most of that over to that CARES Act grant, and

2:16:10 then continue to work with

2:16:13 risk management to submit ones that we can’t move over in the

2:16:17 event we do get some reimbursement.

2:16:20 So we’ll take the first 777,000, move it to new CARES Act, the

2:16:26 rest of the PPE cleaning

2:16:28 surprise and FEMA eligible items that are in ESSER, we will

2:16:33 submit for reimbursement

2:16:35 through FEMA in hopes of getting that, but knowing that we may

2:16:41 or may not get that reimbursement.

2:16:45 If that made any kind of sense, that would be surprising because

2:16:48 this whole process makes

2:16:49 no sense. So hopefully that helps. - Thank you, Dr. Sullivan. I

2:16:54 know that you

2:16:55 have been deep in juggling all of this and we appreciate all the

2:16:58 work that you’re doing.

2:16:59 And I appreciate that explanation. I think it’s important for

2:17:03 everyone to know some of

2:17:04 the challenges that we’re facing with some of the promises that

2:17:07 are being made at different

2:17:08 levels. So thank you so much for that explanation. - Yeah, no

2:17:12 problem.

2:17:13 - And Dr. Thede, I don’t mean to put you on the spot, but we’ve

2:17:15 had a couple of people

2:17:16 talk about, of course Ms. West has been talking to us about

2:17:19 substitute pay increases. Ms.

2:17:21 DePaul spoke tonight about substitute pay as well. I know that

2:17:28 we obviously have been

2:17:29 talking about how to address our substitute shortage in lots of

2:17:33 different ways, but do

2:17:35 you have at the top of your mind, I know there’s been so much

2:17:39 going on. We did a substitute

2:17:40 survey last year. And if I recall correctly, we asked

2:17:46 substitutes if they preferred to

2:17:48 have a per hour pay raise, or if they preferred to get a daily

2:17:53 increase, if they were working

2:17:56 at priority schools, can you just brief us on that? ‘Cause I

2:18:01 think it’s important to

2:18:01 know that we’re not ignoring the issue, but we did not have

2:18:06 consensus that everyone preferred

2:18:08 to have a pay raise over the other options. Is that correct?

2:18:11 - That is correct. The preferences that our survey last year

2:18:15 indicated, one was an additional

2:18:17 supplement for those who worked 60 days in the school year. That

2:18:22 was highly desirable.

2:18:23 Another was additional pay to work at priority schools, because

2:18:27 that came out to be more

2:18:28 than an hourly rate increase. There was not consistency on what

2:18:34 everybody wanted. We put

2:18:35 out the lunch as well as something that was an option. We also

2:18:39 put out the reimbursement

2:18:41 for all the fees that substitutes have to pay to become

2:18:45 substitutes. Fingerprinting,

2:18:47 drug testing, the certification, and reimbursing that as well.

2:18:51 And that was also desirable

2:18:53 for the substitutes. But the one comment about the difference

2:18:57 between a high school diploma

2:18:58 and an associate’s degree, that is spot on with change in hourly

2:19:03 rate. That has compressed

2:19:05 the pay between those two ranges. So our last speaker, or our

2:19:09 second to last speaker spoke

2:19:10 to that, and that is correct.

2:19:12 - Thank you so much for giving us those details. I appreciate it.

2:19:15 And certainly not to overlook

2:19:17 any of the other speakers that we heard tonight. Thank you, Mr.

2:19:21 Savage, Ms. Skipper, Mr. Hilliard

2:19:24 and Mr. Colucci for bringing forward some of the concerns as

2:19:27 well. We certainly don’t

2:19:29 mean to make it sound as though everything went perfectly on day

2:19:33 one, but we know that

2:19:35 we have some issues to work through. And I’m quite confident

2:19:37 that our team in the back

2:19:38 has been taking note of the things that you brought up and they’ll

2:19:40 be reaching out to

2:19:41 try to address those. So, all right, with that, we move on to

2:19:46 the, did you have something,

2:19:47 Mr. Susan?

2:19:48 - I just want to say, Mr. Ray, thank you for coming in and

2:19:50 saying such positive things.

2:19:52 You got a couple of friends, you guys want to come here more

2:19:55 often? We’d enjoy it. You

2:19:56 know, I’m thinking, I’m thinking about possibly making the

2:19:59 Robert Ray award for the greatest

2:20:01 speech at here, you know, when this guy came down here to tell

2:20:05 us good stuff and, you know,

2:20:06 not that we need good stuff. We actually, we need good stuff. So

2:20:10 anytime Robert, I think

2:20:16 Dr. Mullins, you can make stuff like that happen. He’s the guy

2:20:18 that makes that happen.

2:20:19 - I mean, he came two weeks ago with a concern. The concern was

2:20:22 met and he came through back

2:20:24 to report and said, there you go.

2:20:27 - But I just wanted to say, thank you for coming down here. That’s

2:20:30 all. And I think

2:20:31 I am going to have some fun with this Robert Ray award thing.

2:20:34 - Yes. Thank you, Mr. Susan. I had meant to address that

2:20:37 directly as well. Okay. Moving

2:20:40 on to our consent agenda, Dr. Mullins.

2:20:44 - There are 12 agenda items under this category.

2:20:48 - Thank you, Dr. Mullins. Does any board member wish to pull any

2:20:51 item from the consent agenda?

2:20:54 Seeing none, then I will entertain a motion to accept the

2:20:56 consent items as presented.

2:20:58 - Move to approve.

2:20:59 - Second.

2:21:00 - Moved by Mr. Susan, seconded by Ms. Deskevich. Is there any

2:21:03 discussion?

2:21:04 - Yes, I have a bit.

2:21:05 - Ms. McDougall.

2:21:06 - I just want to give a shout out because it’s finally here that

2:21:10 Merritt Island High

2:21:11 School will get a restroom on their ball field. This is a work

2:21:16 in the process has taken about

2:21:18 eight years. And I want to thank Sue Han and principal Rehmer.

2:21:24 And of course the Merritt

2:21:26 Island community who supported and gave money to this. This has

2:21:30 been ongoing, and I’m very

2:21:32 excited that we are moving ahead. So thank you.

2:21:35 - And we’re excited for you, Ms. McDougall. Thank you so much.

2:21:38 Any additional discussion

2:21:39 on the item? Or on the agenda?

2:21:42 - On number 12, our inter-local agreement CARES Act funding.

2:21:47 Just don’t want to blow

2:21:48 past that without recognizing that the Board of County

2:21:51 Commissioners, you might want to

2:21:52 just give us a little more details. But the Board of County

2:21:55 Commissioners has agreed to

2:21:56 share some of the county-wide CARES Act funding that’s come with

2:22:00 the school district. We don’t

2:22:03 know the amount on that yet, right?

2:22:05 - Yes. So the county received their own allocation of CARES Act

2:22:11 grant funding, considerably larger

2:22:15 allocation than Brevard Public Schools received. However, they

2:22:20 reached out to Frank Abate,

2:22:22 my manager, and asked, “Might the school district qualify as a

2:22:26 nonprofit to apply for consideration

2:22:29 of those funds?” And he came back and said, “Yes, thank you,” to

2:22:32 the county commission.

2:22:33 They voted unanimously to include us as a nonprofit agent to

2:22:39 apply for funds. We have

2:22:41 submitted, I believe, seven requests totaling well over $3

2:22:47 million, three and a half million

2:22:50 dollars of requests. A couple of the items include additional

2:22:54 hours for our health techs

2:22:56 in our schools. So rather than miss more, are they currently six

2:23:02 and a half hours? Five

2:23:04 and a half hours. We requested funding to staff them for eight

2:23:08 hours in our school so

2:23:09 that we would have a health tech full-time for semester. We also

2:23:14 requested additional

2:23:15 funding for mental health services for our students, funds to

2:23:23 cover all of the individual

2:23:27 food wrapping that’s required in our food service program. Miss

2:23:33 Moore, can you think

2:23:34 of some of the other requests?

2:23:36 - Yeah, hotspots.

2:23:37 - Hotspots for our students.

2:23:40 - Help with our before and after care. We asked for help with,

2:23:47 like you said, the mental

2:23:48 health program. That one, it was not acceptable given the

2:23:53 parameters of that grant. And then

2:23:56 the last one was nurses. There was the last one. There was

2:24:03 another one. But they’re supposed

2:24:06 to be getting back with us probably one day this week to

2:24:08 determine if we’re able to move

2:24:10 forward with that.

2:24:11 - Good. Well, I just wanted to thank the county commissioners

2:24:14 for allowing us to have that

2:24:16 additional funding. It is very much needed and appreciated.

2:24:19 - The interlocal agreement is just a acknowledgement that if

2:24:22 funds go unused, they have to be returned

2:24:24 to the county for the grant.

2:24:27 - I did remember the last one. It was for 20 additional social

2:24:30 workers in our schools.

2:24:32 - Very good. Thank you. Any additional discussion on the consent

2:24:37 agenda? All right, then please

2:24:46 vote. And the motion passes 5-0. All right, that is going to

2:24:56 move us into our action agenda,

2:24:58 Dr. Mullen.

2:24:59 - Ms. Belfort and members of the board, there are a total of

2:25:02 three action items for us to

2:25:03 go through. Item G23 is on procurement solicitations.

2:25:07 - What are the wishes of the board?

2:25:08 - Move to approve.

2:25:09 - Second.

2:25:10 - Moved by Mr. Susan. Seconded by Ms. McDougall. Is there any

2:25:11 discussion? Please vote.

2:25:11 - Thank you.

2:25:12 - Ms. Bellford, members of the board, there are a total of three

2:25:13 action items for us to

2:25:13 go through. Item G23 is on procurement solicitations.

2:25:14 - What are the wishes of the board?

2:25:15 - Move to approve.

2:25:16 - Second.

2:25:17 - Moved by Mr. Susan. Seconded by Ms. McDougall. Is there any

2:25:17 discussion? Please vote.

2:25:29 - The motion passes 5-0, Dr. Mullens.

2:25:33 - Item G24 is department school initiated agreements.

2:25:36 - What are the wishes of the board?

2:25:38 - Move to approve.

2:25:39 - Second.

2:25:40 - Moved by Mr. Susan. Seconded by Ms. Deskevich. Any discussion?

2:25:43 - I’d just like to point out that in a couple of these items,

2:25:47 our team is already working

2:25:49 hard to cost save. If you look through some of the items that

2:25:53 are in here, the SAT in

2:25:54 different areas, I know that we had a speaker, the gentleman,

2:25:58 one of the substitute seats.

2:25:59 Some of the substitute teachers speakers mentioned that we need

2:26:03 to start now preparing, and I

2:26:05 just wanted to point out that even on tonight’s agenda, there

2:26:08 are areas that staff and Dr.

2:26:10 Mullens is looking for every single dollar to save and tuck away.

2:26:15 - Thank you for that clear presentation Ms. Deskevich. I think

2:26:18 that’s important as well.

2:26:20 Any additional discussion? All right.

2:26:21 - All right. Please vote. The motion passes five zero. Dr. Mullens.

2:26:39 - G25 is for the ratification of emergency procurements related

2:26:43 to COVID-19.

2:26:44 - What are the wishes of the board? Thank you, ma’am. Motion by

2:26:52 Ms. Campbell, seconded

2:26:53 by Ms. McDougall. Any discussion? Please vote. The motion passes

2:27:08 five zero. We’ll move on

2:27:12 to the information agenda, which includes items for board review

2:27:14 and may be brought

2:27:15 back for action at a subsequent meeting. No action will be taken

2:27:17 on these items tonight.

2:27:19 Dr. Mullens.

2:27:20 - There are four items under the information category.

2:27:22 - Does any board member wish to discuss any of the four

2:27:26 information items?

2:27:28 - I just have a question on the personnel allocations. Are these

2:27:33 based on, I’m guessing

2:27:35 maybe this is for Dr. Dutty, are these based on projected

2:27:40 enrollment or are these based

2:27:43 on actual enrollment? And at what point does this change?

2:27:47 Usually we approve it for the

2:27:49 year and it has to stay that way. I’m wondering if we’re 14,000

2:27:54 students down, how this looks

2:27:55 different mid year.

2:27:58 - These allocations have not changed over the last few years.

2:28:01 They are the same. They’re

2:28:02 based on our enrollments. The allocation factors are contingent

2:28:07 upon student enrollment. So

2:28:10 we’ll have to look at that closely as we go through our six day

2:28:16 count.

2:28:16 - So we haven’t made any adjustments in here for COVID either. I

2:28:20 mean, it’s a separate

2:28:21 question because it seems like, anyway, have we made any

2:28:26 adjustments?

2:28:27 - We have not made any adjustments for COVID, no.

2:28:31 - Any additional questions on any of the information items? All

2:28:38 right, seeing none, we will move

2:28:40 on to board member discussion. Does any board member have

2:28:43 anything else they would like

2:28:44 to report at this time, Mr. Susan?

2:28:46 - Thank you. Just wanted to give the board a heads up. So we

2:28:51 keep having these pre-K

2:28:53 issues over and over again. First it’s best and brightest, then

2:28:56 it’s retirement, then

2:28:58 it’s this, then it’s that. And then even with our reopening plan,

2:29:01 the stuff was coming out

2:29:03 of Office of Early Learning and there was delayed. And it’s just

2:29:07 like every single time

2:29:08 we talk about pre-K, we find that they’re not respected to be a

2:29:13 part of our K-12, right?

2:29:14 So one of the things is, as many know, like I was in Tallahassee

2:29:17 with them, we were pounding

2:29:18 away, we got some headroom, we changed some of the, we educated

2:29:22 a lot of people on some

2:29:23 of the issues and we got some stuff moving. But the problem is,

2:29:25 is we just keep coming

2:29:26 up with stuff. So when I was talking to Debbie Mayfield, Thad

2:29:30 Altman, Placencia and the rest

2:29:33 of them, and I said, look, I said, instead of us just trying to

2:29:35 fix this thing like one

2:29:36 at a time, I think that we need to come up with a pre-K

2:29:40 commission. Ask the legislature

2:29:43 to sit down and just evaluate it as an early learning coalition,

2:29:47 put it together as how

2:29:48 it ties into K through 12 and address all the issues that we

2:29:51 have with pre-K. So I called

2:29:53 Jane Goodwin from the Florida School Board Association and some

2:29:55 of the other groups and

2:29:56 said, hey, would this be something that you would think about

2:29:58 possibly putting on our

2:29:59 agenda? So what I was going to ask, now’s not the appropriate

2:30:03 time, but think about

2:30:05 possibly being one of our legislative issues that we have coming

2:30:08 up. And in the meantime,

2:30:09 I’m going to go try to bird-dog some of the other legislators to

2:30:13 tell them, hey, would

2:30:14 you think about this? So that it’s, one of the issues we have is,

2:30:17 is that we establish

2:30:18 our thing, everybody gets elected, then all of a sudden session

2:30:20 happens and it’s just

2:30:21 so fast, right? So if I can put it in their ear now, if I can

2:30:24 start aligning some of the

2:30:26 issues, so I just wanted to tell you guys that. And then one

2:30:29 little note, Dr. Mullins,

2:30:30 is that our reopening plan says K through 12. If we can add pre

2:30:34 to the whole front of

2:30:35 that, that’d be good too. And that’s it. I just want to tell you

2:30:38 guys that. So if you

2:30:39 hear me moving around, you know my direction and what I’m trying

2:30:42 to do, but I do know that

2:30:43 that, as far as a district, that comes up for us to discuss, but

2:30:46 I’m going to try to

2:30:47 push it personally. All right? Ms. Klein is requesting attention.

2:30:52 Uh-oh. What happened?

2:30:54 Mr. Susan, the pre-K plan is a totally separate plan. So our

2:31:00 plan is our K through 12 plan

2:31:03 and we have a separate pre-K and there were, there have been

2:31:09 every day this week, Marilyn

2:31:12 Chappie has sat on a Office of Early Learning coalition meeting

2:31:17 and they’re making additional

2:31:20 adjustments to the pre-K opening plans. Thank you, Ms. Klein.

2:31:32 Any additional items for discussion

2:31:35 this evening? I’ve got something I wanted to share. I believe I

2:31:39 shared last, pre-COVID,

2:31:42 I don’t remember how long ago, that the city of Palm Bay was

2:31:47 wanting to host a Palm Bay

2:31:49 STEAM day and they were going to invite the schools, especially

2:31:53 schools who have STEAM

2:31:54 academies or programs to come and be a part, you know kind of

2:31:59 all got put on the back burner

2:32:01 for the last several months, but they are, I met with the youth

2:32:04 advisory board last night

2:32:05 and Deputy Mayor Johnson shared that they are moving forward

2:32:09 with that. They’re changing

2:32:11 plans instead of an indoor venue. It’s going to be at Fred Poppy

2:32:14 Park, but the date is

2:32:15 November the 14th from 10 to 3. They’re going to do it outside

2:32:19 and you know all the precautions

2:32:21 and everything, but they’re moving forward and real excited to

2:32:24 have this opportunity

2:32:25 for our students who would like to come out and get to see, you

2:32:31 know, science, technology,

2:32:34 engineering, arts, and mathematics all in motion and what it

2:32:37 would look like and inspire

2:32:38 them to pursue careers in those areas. That will be on November

2:32:42 the 14th and I’ll send

2:32:43 out some more information as we get closer to the date. And then

2:32:48 also just wanted to

2:32:49 remind everybody who may not have done your census, they have

2:32:54 extended the deadline for

2:32:55 getting your census information to October, so if you’re still

2:32:59 waiting out there, you

2:33:00 don’t want people to come knocking on your door, then go online

2:33:04 and fill out your census

2:33:06 information so that we can, because every dollar counts, every

2:33:10 person counts and we

2:33:11 want to make sure that Brevard County is actually looking really

2:33:14 good compared to the state

2:33:15 and the nation, so keep it at Brevard and go get counted, but

2:33:19 those deadlines have been

2:33:21 extended to October. Thank you, Ms. Campbell. Any other board

2:33:24 members have any issues to

2:33:26 address? Dr. Mullins, anything else to report this evening?

2:33:28 Seeing no further business,

2:33:30 this meeting is adjourned. Have a great night.

2:33:41 [Music]