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

2023-02-07 - School Board Work Session

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11:39 » Good afternoon.

11:40 The February 7th, 2023 board work session is now in order.

11:44 Call, roll call, please.

11:46 » Here.

11:53 » Please stand for the Pledge of Allegiance.

11:54 » I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of

12:00 America.

12:02 And to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,

12:08 indivisible,

12:08 with liberty and justice for all.

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12:13 » Thank you, everybody.

12:14 Thank you, everybody.

12:17 Just wanted to go over a couple of things I was gonna say due to

12:21 the fact that we

12:22 have so many policies.

12:24 If we can, as a board, agree that we may only speak at one time

12:28 up to three

12:28 minutes rather than a longer time period, we might be able to

12:31 get through it.

12:33 Doesn’t mean that you can’t respond and stuff like that.

12:35 But opening statements and stuff like that, more than three

12:37 minutes,

12:38 we can move through.

12:39 Is that okay with everybody?

12:41 Good, okay.

12:42 The other thing is that due to the fact that we have so

12:45 many of these agenda items moving forward, we’re gonna have to

12:49 move through.

12:50 But in the event that we don’t get through to all of them,

12:53 we’re gonna roll them to the board meeting.

12:55 And I would like to time certain end at 4.30.

12:58 That way it gives us an opportunity to get something to eat,

13:01 if that’s okay with everybody, okay?

13:04 Also, many of you guys, as we go through these, as talking to Dr.

13:09 Schiller,

13:09 we’re gonna put as we move through them, after they go through,

13:13 the revision of 2023, even if we don’t make any decisions on

13:16 them.

13:17 Like if we just say good, then they get revised.

13:20 So good to go.

13:21 Any questions on that?

13:22 » Reviewed.

13:24 » Reviewed, right.

13:25 » It’s like revision 2023, review 2023, whatever the

13:28 appropriate verbiage is there.

13:30 They’ll appropriately apply it.

13:32 Are we good?

13:33 » Yeah.

13:34 » All right, the next topic is board policy 0169.1,

13:37 participation at board meetings.

13:40 Mr. Paul Gibbs, please address the board.

13:43 » Good afternoon.

13:44 This policy is brought back to the board.

13:46 The board’s request to address the change in public speaking

13:50 policy in the board.

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14:16 Do any members wish to discuss this policy or make suggestions

14:19 for a revision?

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14:50 Everybody else okay with it?

15:02 Any questions?

15:04 So one of the things I would like to talk about, just so you

15:07 guys know,

15:08 is that part of what we’ve had a problem with is other people

15:11 signing other people up.

15:13 Because they’re racing from work, from Kennedy Space Center or

15:16 somewhere else.

15:18 And the issue is that when we start our meetings at 5.30,

15:21 somebody may get here at 5.35, right?

15:23 And they really wanted to speak to something.

15:25 So the county, what they do is they allow them to sign up up

15:28 until the public discussion moment.

15:30 I’m gonna entertain that as a thought process because I feel,

15:34 look, the majority of people come here, right?

15:37 But if you get a flat tire and this is your one thing that you

15:39 really wanted to speak to,

15:41 I would like to allow them up until we start the public

15:45 discussion to actually signing up.

15:48 If that was the thought process, I wanted to hear what your

15:52 thoughts on that were.

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16:11 » Yeah, I agree.

16:34 The more opportunity we have for the public to speak, the better.

16:39 I think that would be, it’s nothing but a good thing.

16:43 » And we’ll allow staff here to put together a process for them

16:46 to administer that.

16:48 » Sure.

16:49 » But I think that the idea is that we’ve had students that

16:51 come in, being here for six years,

16:54 and even as a teacher, there’s times when you just don’t run and

16:56 pine, and it’s a sad moment.

16:58 So if everybody’s okay with that.

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17:31 » Hang on just a second.

17:34 You mentioned one other thing.

17:36 One of the problems that we’ve had recently is that the papers

17:36 kind of get shuffled and all that stuff.

17:43 I would like to, under the guise of the board and direction,

17:47 to allow staff to try to present to us possibly a more digital

17:47 format so that people can come up and sign in digitally.

17:54 So that that becomes more of a form system than a bunch of

17:56 handwritten.

17:58 » Easier to read.

18:00 » And it’s not saying that we’re gonna move forward in this

18:01 direction.

18:02 » Right.

18:03 » I would just like the staff to entertain looking at it to see

18:06 if there’s an opportunity for them to streamline the process a

18:08 little bit better.

18:10 » So there’s, sorry.

18:12 So they’re still having to do it in person, but maybe an iPad

18:15 sign in type thing?

18:17 » Yeah.

18:18 If you watch, so there has been some, there was a lady who came

18:21 up here, I don’t know if you guys remember the other day.

18:24 And she was wanting to speak and somebody had, just like we’ve

18:27 allowed people in the past, signed up her name for her and stuff

18:30 like that.

18:31 I watched the video.

18:32 But then what I also watched was all of the process of them

18:34 sitting out there going through all that stuff.

18:37 And I was like, oh my gosh.

18:38 Like we should be able to go up and have a couple of iPads to

18:40 sign in.

18:41 It all, you know what I mean, accumulates.

18:43 You could have a drop down menu that it talks to exactly those

18:45 agenda items.

18:46 I mean it’s just a better process.

18:48 But I don’t know what that looks like.

18:49 I just wanted to ask that if that’s okay by you guys to just

18:52 move forward in that direction.

18:54 » So I, I don’t remember what I was going to say now.

18:58 So another benefit of waiting and allowing people to sign a

19:01 little bit later is we have some more meetings where the

19:05 beginning is excessively long.

19:07 And they’re sitting here waiting just because we told them they

19:09 had to sign up by 5.30.

19:11 Which isn’t fair to some people that legitimately have to be

19:13 home and doing things they can sit here for an hour sometimes

19:15 before public comment comes up.

19:18 And it’s not really very public.

19:20 » Sure.

19:21 » When it comes to the electronic sign up, as long as they’re

19:25 able to sign up themselves.

19:27 Because we cannot require them to have to show identification to

19:30 sign up to make a public comment.

19:33 So forcing them to tell someone their name and address is going

19:37 to be not really kosher.

19:39 And when it comes to watching the video, I know that there was

19:43 accusations made and calling people saying that our staff

19:47 members threw out the paper.

19:50 That wasn’t true.

19:52 So I don’t really think there’s a need for it.

19:55 I don’t think we’ve ever had a real problem before if it’s a

19:57 burden for our staff to do.

19:59 But at a fair minimum, if we do it, it has to be free so that

20:02 the public signs themselves.

20:04 » Yeah.

20:05 The idea is the same process except digitally.

20:08 That individual, what had happened is somebody else had signed

20:11 them up.

20:12 And because they weren’t there at the time, the appropriate

20:14 person said, no, you can’t come and speak because you weren’t

20:17 here.

20:18 You can’t sign that up.

20:19 So that was it.

20:20 And I watched the video and I was going to try to email her that

20:24 so that she could see that.

20:26 But the issue was that I tried to email it on the server and it

20:29 was too big.

20:30 So anyways, so everybody’s okay with looking for a digital

20:33 option as long as it follows the same process of them signing up

20:37 themselves.

20:39 » Right.

20:40 » Yeah.

20:41 » So we’re not putting that in the policy?

20:42 » No.

20:43 It’s just practice.

20:44 It’s just that we’re here.

20:45 » It’s a work channel.

20:46 » Is everybody okay with that?

20:47 » Mm-hmm.

20:48 » All right.

20:49 You guys have the direction that you need from the board for

20:52 those pieces?

20:53 Or do we need to be able to tell them?

20:56 It’s pretty simple, right Paul?

20:58 [ Inaudible ]

21:05 » Yeah.

21:06 And it’s just an observation that it’s possible.

21:08 It’s not like we do it if it doesn’t work out.

21:10 It’s not like we’re making you do it.

21:12 All right?

21:13 » Mm-hmm.

21:14 » Okay.

21:15 Everybody good there?

21:16 Next topic is board policy 9800, charter schools.

21:18 Ms. Jane Klein, please address the board.

21:21 » Good afternoon, board.

21:23 This policy is – excuse me, 9800, charter schools.

21:28 The charter school policy has been amended to include new

21:31 language from EOLA revised

21:34 in 2022 to reflect statutory language, including the removal of

21:39 language regarding charter

21:42 closure in addition of the language regarding charter school

21:45 review commission, deadlines

21:48 related to new charter school applications.

21:51 The older version did not include any EOLA language.

21:55 These proposed revisions encompass the suggested language from EOLA.

22:00 The previous policy 9800 was vague and did not encompass the EOLA

22:05 language.

22:07 Changes include substantive incorporation of the charter statute.

22:12 » Are there any questions by the board?

22:16 Any questions by the board?

22:17 » Yes, I have one.

22:19 » In regards to the art committee, the application review

22:21 committee, I think it’s on page 58.

22:25 It looks like the district gets to assign certain people that

22:29 will be part of that application

22:31 review committee.

22:32 Is it possible to add possibly a school board member on that

22:35 committee as well?

22:37 » I have to check statute on that.

22:39 » Okay.

22:40 If you don’t mind just checking, because we have an even number

22:40 right now on the committee,

22:42 which could pose a problem when it comes to voting anyway.

22:44 So it seems that it might be good for – and especially since

22:46 the board will be ultimately

22:48 the one that reviews and approves or denies those charters.

22:51 All right, thank you.

23:19 » I’ve got a few – this was a long edition.

23:25 And Dr. Roberts even told me it was coming.

23:28 Let’s see.

23:29 I’m just going to the clean version because the red line version

23:33 is hard to read.

23:35 So under 183 – and I actually think this was in the old policy.

23:41 But just to help me, and I’m sorry to be a rich person, this is

23:46 a really long – I promise

23:49 everything else is going to be short.

23:51 So materially I like the law.

23:53 Can you give me an example of what that might look like?

23:58 » No.

23:59 [ Laughter ]

24:01 » Oh, that’s a true question.

24:04 [ Inaudible ]

24:26 » It’s 125.

24:37 [ Inaudible ]

24:55 » But I think if I can speak to that, I think what they’re

25:12 saying is that we can bring them

25:16 in and materially violating the law means that we are violating

25:22 the law and we can apply.

25:25 I didn’t want us as a whole or anybody listening to say that we

25:28 can’t – somebody breaks the

25:30 law, we can’t apply it to them.

25:32 Just understand the stability of the process.

25:34 [ Inaudible ]

25:42 » I purposely – I think it’s perfectly broad and not specific.

25:47 The history of Florida state laws to not necessarily only apply

25:50 to charter schools or loosely or

25:53 broadly apply to charter schools.

25:55 And I think the intention is so that school districts are still

25:58 liable if something is

26:00 against the law to bring it to their attention.

26:02 But ultimately they can decide whether or not they break the law.

26:05 [ Inaudible ]

26:32 » Would this preclude someone who, for example, managed a

26:37 charter that was shut down from

26:37 applying for a new charter that –

26:40 » That would be something we would take into consideration.

26:43 [ Inaudible ]

26:51 » – basically talk about as we’re going through the process,

27:02 we can look into someone’s background and say, have they – have

27:04 they successfully done it before? Maybe not so successfully.

27:06 Mike, can you hear her better?

27:12 [ Inaudible ]

27:22 » So, yes, we can look into the background of anyone and all

27:26 that would come to you when we do the charter school application

27:30 process. We haven’t gone through a charter school application

27:35 process in two years now and the one we currently are working

27:39 through, they’re on hold again.

27:42 But we do all that background research on who’s applying with

27:46 the application.

27:48 [ Inaudible ]

28:25 » Yes, it certainly would have been had the research been done

28:28 prior because that was in another state, the same situation.

28:33 [ Inaudible ]

29:42 » So next section, K – this is going to be on page 141.

29:50 Actually, no, I’m sorry, 142. 142. KLM and really continuing on

29:58 talk about what it takes for us to close a charter school.

30:01 [ Inaudible ]

32:21 » We discussed some really amazing charter schools. But at the

32:23 same time, when we had a situation where we had a bad situation,

32:28 it took us two years and a half million dollars. Three years and

32:31 half a million dollars.

32:33 [ Inaudible ]

32:49 » Ms. Campbell, the one thing that we continue to do is to

32:52 elevate the charter schools that are doing amazing work.

32:57 And we go in and support the ones who are struggling to get them

33:02 back on track. And then take – start the action when we need to.

33:10 [ Inaudible ]

33:30 » Thank you, Ms. Jenkins.

33:32 [ Inaudible ]

33:50 » No, it’s two consecutive Ds. And then we start with the

33:53 bureau school improvement. Then if we go to an F, we start the

33:57 process of turnaround, which we’ve only had to do that one time

34:01 in Brevard’s history.

34:03 [ Inaudible ]

34:30 » So we bring them all to you. And if you do not agree with the

34:34 financial plan, that’s number one with the charter schools, the

34:38 financial plan.

34:40 If the financial plan is solid, then we typically go through –

34:44 they also have to bring their educational plan. You know, if it’s

34:50 going to be a performing arts charter or a – any topic, then

34:54 they have to bring their educational curriculum plan to us.

35:00 And so as the board, you review it, they have already – they’re

35:04 already working to establish their own board who will guide them.

35:10 But we’re basically an overseer.

35:14 And the team that I have, they go in – the assistant director

35:19 of the charter goes into about three reviews a year into walking

35:24 the school and checking for fidelity of work.

35:29 [ Inaudible ]

35:40 » But essentially, legally, we have to watch them cross their

35:47 teeth, dot their I’s, and there’s really nothing we can do

35:54 unless it’s something really absurd within their application.

36:03 And then even if we were to go as before to deny an application,

36:03 there’s really nothing we can do anyway because it appeals to

36:04 the state and the state ends up approving it anyway. So even

36:05 though this is an insanely long policy, we don’t really have

36:06 much to worry about.

36:07 » Thank you, Ms. Jenkins. And I would remind everybody that in

36:14 our county, it’s a little bit different the way that we are, our

36:16 relationship. There are other counties that the state has gone

36:18 through this type of design because the county does the opposite

36:19 of what we do, which is allowing them. And they never accept

36:22 them. They never let them come forward and it becomes a wall. So

36:26 to apply the same dynamics in our county that others are doing

36:29 is a little bit different, but I just want to say that.

36:32 » With anybody else, any other comments? Good to go. All right.

36:36 Next topic is board policy 3120.11, preference for veterans and

36:41 employers. Ms. Carol Green, please address the board.

36:45 » Good afternoon, Dr. Schiller, Mr. Susan, members of the board.

36:49 We are presenting a new policy for preference for veterans and

36:53 employment in order to be in alliance with Florida Statute 1012.32,

36:58 which is preference for veterans and employment. The purpose of

37:02 this policy is to ensure compliance with all the applicable

37:06 federal and state laws, Florida State Board of Education rules.

37:10 And from the approval of this policy, we will revise our

37:14 administrative procedures and train our staff related to

37:18 veterans preference.

37:20 » Thank you, Ms. Green. Is there anybody else that wishes to

37:36 discuss this?

37:41 All right. Next topic is board policy 5121, control open

37:45 enrollment. Ms. Klein, can you please address the board?

37:50 » Certainly. This policy is being updated based on new state

37:53 statute and language concerning updates to Florida Statute 1002.31,

37:59 control open enrollment. Public school parental choice.

38:03 The new addition is to require school districts to maintain a

38:08 wait list of students who do not access due to capacity and

38:13 notify parents when space becomes available and to post an

38:18 updated list of schools with grade level capacity every 12 weeks.

38:25 This policy is being revised for technical changes only. These

38:35 proposed revisions do encompass the language in NEOLA.

38:35 » Thank you, Ms. Klein. Is there anybody that wishes to address

38:38 any of the issues in the control open enrollment?

38:41 » Yeah. I just – because of the way this sounds to the public,

38:52 I just want to ask. Because it’s my understanding, at least the

38:56 ones that I’ve interacted with, I’ve not interacted with all of

38:57 our schools of choice, that they themselves were keeping a list

38:58 and a wait list. So I just – if you could confirm or deny that

38:59 that should be happening, I just want our public to know that we

39:00 were doing that if we were.

39:01 » We did not have a district-wide process. Schools were, but

39:09 now we have a public-facing process so that we can constantly

39:16 open seats based on capacity.

39:21 » So that – we had changed our policy the last time we

39:26 adjusted it to allow those schools, the choice schools. But this

39:32 is applying to every single school, right? Every single school.

39:33 » Okay. So I was asked the question how this would apply to

39:36 special programs like EPO, I mean, obviously, if someone’s in

39:40 the – if they’re going to transfer in the middle of March and

39:43 they have been a part of, let’s say, construction or a welding

39:46 program, you know, they can’t really attend a March and Genesis

39:50 welding program, but maybe they can go ahead and get into the

39:53 school. So what is that going to look like for the students to

39:57 be able to move in the middle of a term?

40:00 » So it is program availability as well. So if the program

40:04 doesn’t have seats or cannot start a student in the middle of a

40:08 term, then they would continue to be on the wait list. However,

40:13 you know, I’m going to live in my world of kindergarten.

40:18 » So you have a kindergarten child on the wait list at West

40:21 Melbourne School of Science, which we always do, and a student

40:25 leaves. Then that next child, we will start that roll up

40:29 immediately.

40:31 » Right. But the difference is now we’ll also have availability

40:35 at Meddling or Oxnard or –

40:37 » Absolutely. Any time that the seats have become available,

40:41 that rolling wait list of EPOs.

40:44 » Right. And not just at the school, but at the specific grade

40:47 level.

40:48 » That is correct. We have worked with facilities, Karen Black,

40:53 to build a document that shows per class, per seat, and then the

40:58 principal goes in and verifies that that is true, and we open up

41:03 those seats.

41:05 » Okay.

41:06 » We are having very few actual seats available, but –

41:10 » Okay. And just one final thing. How does this play with our

41:15 current process? Do we still have our – like right now, we’ve

41:18 been – we would normally in February from this time open up the

41:22 EPOs and ELOs for secondary right now.

41:26 So if you want to be in the Cambridge program at other Cambridge

41:26 schools or in the welding program or something outside of your

41:28 – the magnet school, all of that, now is the time. Are we still

41:40 going to do that and we’re just going to do this continuous

41:40 enrollment on top of that?

41:40 » That is correct.

41:41 » Okay. Okay. That was the question that was asked. All right.

41:45 Thank you.

41:47 » I just have one question. So this policy says that it’s going

41:51 to be advertised on the district’s website.

41:53 Is this going to be also advertised on the specific school

41:56 website, the vacancies or the capacity of the wait list?

42:01 » I haven’t looked into that. We’re having to maintain it.

42:05 » Okay.

42:06 » So we’re updating it constantly. I don’t know what a hardship

42:11 on a school that would be to actually – because it changes

42:15 every time that – every 12 weeks we change it.

42:19 » Yeah.

42:20 » We can certainly look into what that would look like on a

42:22 school website.

42:24 » I think it’s just – it’s helpful for a parent because a lot

42:26 of times a parent is researching a specific school, so they don’t

42:28 necessarily go to BPS’s page, their overall page. They go to the

42:31 specific school’s page.

42:33 So if they knew, hey, we have this school of choice has this

42:35 long of a wait versus the other one, it wouldn’t be helpful.

42:39 » Okay. We’ll look into it.

42:41 » Thank you.

42:42 » Anybody else? » I have a couple of things. So one of the

42:51 issues that I recently dealt with from a school where we have

42:53 some students that are trying to transfer into another school,

42:56 our capacity during the transfer deals with how much capacity is

43:01 inside each grade level.

43:04 And what I know, and many of you know, too, is that you may sit

43:08 there at this capacity, but each one of those classrooms is of

43:13 different numbers, so you may have opportunities for the

43:17 individual to be able to apply and still get in.

43:21 Are we asking the principals at grade level? So when a student

43:26 applies, my question would be how do we come up with a number

43:31 per grade level that are allowed?

43:35 And then in the event that it’s higher than that number to allow

43:38 this person and it’s closed, do we allow the principal like a

43:41 check verification that they may have to work? Does that make

43:45 sense?

43:45 » Every 12 weeks when we roll this, the principal verifies that

43:49 this is accurate information because we’re going from what

43:53 facility says and we want that actual because as a principal, I

43:57 may know someone is withdrawing tomorrow and facilities doesn’t

44:02 know that yet. So yes, the principal –

44:05 » So we check with them and say, hey, we have this transfer.

44:08 Just to be honest with you, everybody, sometimes the

44:12 relationship a student has with a principal is an issue and they

44:16 just need to begin, right?

44:18 And sometimes with extraordinary circumstances, the opportunity

44:21 to transfer may be not working on the computer, but it might

44:25 just actually be a problem for the principal. So as long as we’re

44:28 doing those kind of things, I really appreciate that.

44:31 » The other thing is that there’s a couple of places inside of

44:34 here where we talk about fish capacity and we shut down the

44:37 school at 95%, right? And that’s always been an issue that is

44:41 good because we have big stock capacity and everything else.

44:46 But there’s other times inside of here where it says, and I’m

44:49 referring to 2C on page 31 of the actual policy, the

44:53 superintendent or the superintendent’s designee agrees a school

44:57 to new incoming education EOL requests regardless of the

45:01 projected student enrollment capacity ratio, right?

45:06 I’ve found this in the past to be kind of difficult because

45:09 there’s schools that I feel should be open and then all of a

45:13 sudden we find out that they’re closed. So what I would propose

45:16 is that we add with the approval of the board.

45:18 So this is not something I want to discuss with you, but this

45:23 allows the superintendent’s designee, which would be the person

45:29 in charge of this department, to just be able to say this is

45:35 closed without the approval of the board. This doesn’t happen

45:40 very often. It’s not something that comes around every year, all

45:40 the time, but once a year they make these things.

45:40 So last year or year before, I don’t know, within the past few

45:44 years, we raised it from 90% capacity to 95% because we realized

45:50 that there were seats available and mine and Dr. Sullivan’s

45:56 belief, I’m speaking for her, is that when a child or parent

46:01 wants a certain school, we need to do everything within our

46:04 power to get them to that school.

46:07 So we raised it to 95% and with the belief of we truly are not

46:12 trying to close any school with capacity unless they truly have

46:18 no seats available.

46:21 And with the rolling open wait list now, we can open it by grade

46:25 level. So we’re not closing an entire school, we’re opening, you

46:30 know, there’s kindergarten seats here, there’s fifth grade seats

46:36 here, but that is the difference in that 90 to 95 and the

46:40 rolling wait list now every 12 weeks.

46:44 But we can definitely look into any of your suggestions.

47:14 I would like to have approval on those kind of options.

47:20 I have a question just to be clear for the verbiage of what you’re

47:23 looking for. So you’re wanting board notification or you’re

47:25 wanting board approval?

47:27 I would like that if we’re going to shut down schools on an

47:30 annual basis that we approve those shutdowns.

47:33 It’s going to hit 95%. That’s fine. But we also just have a list

47:36 at the beginning of every year that we shut down whenever that

47:39 time comes.

47:40 So the past two years, we I think I have two elementary schools

47:44 that we close to ELOs.

47:48 But now we have the rolling new statute language for the rolling

47:51 wait list.

47:52 So that truly negates that closed because if there’s seats

47:57 available, we are statutorily required to open them up.

48:04 Yes, my thing was I had a couple of instances where a parent

48:07 applied, didn’t know that it was closed because it wasn’t going

48:10 on the pager list and somebody decided to close it.

48:12 And it just kind of became a very incident. But if you guys feel

48:15 like that is not an indicator and if the board has a thing where

48:19 we just find out about it, we can open it, whatever that is and

48:20 there’s some flexibility in there.

48:22 I’m OK with that. I don’t want to create a slowing down process.

48:25 I do just want to be able to have the final say rather than

48:27 somebody internally just saying we’re closing the school without

48:30 us knowing about it.

48:32 That’s all I miss. So when I saw you coming in, what do you have?

48:37 So I believe that that list of frozen schools, I think is what

48:41 you’re referring to.

48:44 That’s what I thought it was. But it does come before the board.

48:47 And so and so in recent history, I can’t recall any that were

48:52 frozen for any reason other than capacity.

48:56 I think long ago, perhaps, but certainly not in our contemporary

49:00 history here. So so it does go to the board.

49:03 So it does come before the board inside of there. Is there any

49:06 way to add that to this so that we know that this will be a

49:09 group of student progression plan once a year?

49:12 Yeah, if it’s not if it’s not frozen again, then we is not so

49:37 every year we’re going to bring forward 10 schools.

49:39 Right. So my concern is that we’re the end all be all.

49:49 I get that it’s a combination of taking action for that. My

49:56 concern would be that who has the authority to unfreeze it

50:04 because then you’re waiting for board approval.

50:11 My question was, is just to make sure that there’s some sort of

50:15 a trigger that there was some questions we’d be able to get to.

50:20 So I don’t want to inhibit the process. I think we’re you know,

50:23 I’m happy to make whatever change you’d like.

50:26 But I believe with the new statutory language of the rolling

50:29 enrollment, we’re not going to be.

50:32 And I will tell you, we are not freezing schools like previous

50:37 history because my belief parents get to choose where they want

50:43 your children to be.

50:46 OK, well, I think we’re OK. We don’t need that.

50:49 I think that with that whole piece, it gives us a freedom option

50:52 that we didn’t have prior to when this was going on.

50:55 So I really appreciate it. And just for example, this year, the

50:58 only school that I’ve ever frozen were the high school and

51:01 satellite and which are clearly.

51:04 But we’ve got a little bit on the line right here. We’ll fill it

51:09 up in a heartbeat.

51:11 OK. Next thing I have is this has always been a vein of my piece

51:16 here.

51:17 We love discussion on it. Currently, our teachers and I

51:21 apologize if you guys can go to page 32, it says preferential

51:27 applications for preferential treatment.

51:29 And then it goes down into the tier system under G. OK.

51:33 So if you notice in tier one, which is just to give an overview

51:37 of what I’m speaking to, you have an application.

51:40 Everybody gets put into these tiers. And then depending on how

51:43 many tier one goes first, tier two goes second, tier two goes

51:46 third.

51:47 So you actually have teachers who may be working at school who

51:50 are not able to bring their student.

51:52 And I need some clarification on this just to make sure I’m

51:54 feeling it right.

51:56 That if I’m a teacher, I moved to that school, that school is

51:58 either closed or I’m applying to have that student inside of

52:01 there.

52:02 That they may be involved and be below a person that is either

52:05 relocated to foster care, military personnel or these other

52:09 things.

52:10 Is that true or are they allowed to take a job?

52:14 We take care of our teachers first.

52:16 I know. But that says tier two. Is there a way we can add them

52:22 to tier one?

52:24 Yeah, military is law. Children. So, you know, site based

52:30 employees are tier two.

52:33 My thought process was and we had it in the past where people

52:37 have gone, got a job.

52:39 And this comes up because there’s a discussion about transfers

52:41 and stuff like that currently.

52:43 So if a parent decides that they need to transfer from one

52:45 school to the other and it’s closed, they may want to be able to

52:48 bring their child under the curtain conditions.

52:51 We may not be able to do that. I would love to just say that

52:55 students of parents should just be able to follow them no matter

53:00 what.

53:01 The only unintended consequence could be, that’s our new word

53:06 today, the tier one are the by law required that we have to

53:12 accommodate.

53:14 Our tier two are ones we in our heart want to accommodate. So in

53:21 the event that this school is next to capacity and we have one

53:26 of the required by law, we have to take care of them first.

53:32 So I’m not in my awareness, I have not known of a teacher who

53:37 was turned down of her, his or her child attending a school is

53:43 there.

53:44 So let me ask you this. If I have a dependent child of active

53:47 military personnel and I only have one seat left and a child who

53:51 has been relocated due to foster care.

53:57 Who’s first? Who’s second? A is first. A is first. And honestly,

54:04 I think A, even if we’re at capacity, we have to accept military,

54:06 you have to like, even out of like West Shore, but if they come

54:10 in, even if we’re full, we take them because that’s lost.

54:14 So my proposal would be then, if that is the process, that we

54:17 add D and we put employees under D so that they could be

54:19 considered tier one since we already have a system that we allow

54:23 the others in the head of.

54:25 I’m looking at my friend, Mr. Gibbs.

54:40 If it doesn’t break statute, it would mean the world to our

54:42 people to know that they’re in tier one, because there’s people

54:45 that look at that and they say, we feel like we’re a part of it,

54:47 we’re in tier two, it doesn’t make sense.

54:50 And if that order is already existing in tier one. So we’ll look

54:56 at the statute and this will come back to you.

55:02 Next thing is, is that there’s number seven deals with, and I’m

55:10 sorry, I’m going to, I was trying to get the page numbers here.

55:20 Seven deals with multiple sports. So let me go here after and

55:21 rolls.

55:21 So basically, and I apologize because I did not write them down

55:25 inside of the page numbers.

55:27 There’s an application inside there that says that if I’m

55:30 playing a sport, then I transfer to another school that I can’t

55:33 finish out that season, which I totally understand, except for

55:36 some of those.

55:37 But there’s a problem in there’s transfers where students

55:39 transfer from one school to another, they’ve completed their

55:42 football, and then there’s a thing called spring football.

55:46 So we’re not limiting them from playing spring football, correct?

55:50 Does that make sense?

55:54 I’m phoning a friend in the back for my secondary world.

55:59 It’s considered a different season. It’s considered a lot of

56:01 different things, but I just don’t want to get into it.

56:09 Not knowing I’d be asked this question, I would definitely refer

56:14 to the product, but what I can tell you for a long time,

56:19 principal, spring by FHSA is an extension of fall.

56:24 And so when the eligibility to participate in a game is attached

56:29 to fall, so typically what we’ve done, and again, I’m just

56:34 speaking off experience now since it’s not my thing.

56:40 What we’ve done is students who transfer in January can

56:43 participate in the working out program and things like that.

56:48 They cannot participate in a spring game. And so historically

56:51 speaking, that’s not been super problematic.

56:55 So if a child transfers from school A to school B in January, at

56:59 school B they can do the working out, they can do the

57:02 conditioning, they can do all of that.

57:05 They just can’t do the actual spring game. A lot of our schools

57:08 have actually gone to scrimmages on like red, black, things like

57:12 that.

57:13 So it has not been a barrier. I would have referred to official

57:17 from obviously our athletic director, but in practice it’s not

57:22 been problematic, but it is attached to fall eligibility.

57:26 So kids that are seniors don’t play in the spring ball game. So

57:29 you’re saying that it’s attached to fall eligibility and that

57:32 juniors on down are the only ones that are allowed to

57:35 participate, but in the event that they want to.

57:37 Listen, it’s just a workout anyway. So it totally understands as

57:40 long as they can practice and do that.

57:43 Not the seniors, but the juniors and below. Yes, correct.

57:47 As long as it’s a proper transfer in January, then it’s not

57:51 problematic at all.

57:53 They just work it out with them. Correct.

57:56 And again, for official word on that, I would certainly defer to

57:59 our current expert just speaking from what I know has been true

58:03 in the past.

58:04 Thank you for that. You might want to hang out just for a second,

58:08 because you are a secondary principal and this kind of comes to

58:09 you too.

58:10 I mean, you’re five times a champion secondary.

58:15 Here’s the question is, is that currently we have homeschool

58:18 students that we’re about to do a large attraction for to try to

58:21 have them start to participate.

58:23 Certainly.

58:24 One of the things is we know that they have their Rebar Heat,

58:27 but then they also have the opportunity to play for their zone

58:30 schools.

58:31 Correct.

58:32 In the event those homeschool students are allowed to try out,

58:37 they don’t need to.

58:39 Can you explain to me what that process is and is there anything

58:41 in here that we need to add to allow them to streamline process?

58:45 I am going to unofficially, without like permanent marker, tell

58:50 you what I believe is still true.

58:53 Those students have to declare and do some corresponding

58:57 paperwork at the start of the season.

59:00 And then they go through a process and it’s not problematic at

59:05 all, it’s pretty quick.

59:07 Where it’s tricky is when a student is looking to participate

59:12 outside their homeschool.

59:15 That’s a good finding.

59:16 If I live in Viera and I am a homeschool student and I want to

59:20 play any of Viera sports, it’s super fast.

59:24 You just work with the coaches prior to the first day of the

59:27 sport.

59:28 If I live in Viera and I want to play sports for CoCo, that

59:33 application for the choice has to be done in the application

59:38 period so that you have attached yourself.

59:41 It’s a very strange thing.

59:43 No, it’s applicable.

59:44 So if I want to apply to go to CoCo on choice, I go through the

59:48 standard application period.

59:51 If I’m a homeschool and I want to play a sport at CoCo and I don’t

59:55 live there, I have to also do the choice application period.

1:00:01 So if it’s my resident school, it’s easy peasy.

1:00:04 That’s official terminology.

1:00:06 Is that more applicable to that process that you spoke about?

1:00:08 It makes total sense to do the OOs and everything.

1:00:10 And that is specifically defined in here.

1:00:12 I saw that one.

1:00:13 Only if they’re out of their area.

1:00:14 But if they’re in zone and they’re trying out for their team,

1:00:17 would it be more applicable to applying their application

1:00:20 process to this or would they be inside of the homeschool policy

1:00:23 that we have?

1:00:24 Probably they are correct.

1:00:25 I mean, it’s outlined.

1:00:27 So there’s no barriers really to students that are applying in

1:00:30 their homeschool as homeschool or private school, students who

1:00:33 don’t have athletics or anything like that.

1:00:35 But sometimes we get coaches that may not know that process.

1:00:38 So as long as we have it inside of them.

1:00:40 Yeah, our athletic directors, we work with a lot of homeschool

1:00:42 students.

1:00:43 And so I think they thought it’s always just tricky when it’s

1:00:46 not a residential school.

1:00:48 Get it?

1:00:49 I have a question.

1:00:50 Okay.

1:00:51 Ms. Sullivan, I have a question along those same lines.

1:00:53 So if you have a student who is out of area and they’re

1:00:55 participating in a sport and say halfway through their family

1:00:59 decides to homeschool because of academics, they’re having some

1:01:02 struggles there and they want to continue in that sport.

1:01:05 How does that affect them?

1:01:07 Are they still able to continue in the sport or because now they’re

1:01:09 past the window of applying?

1:01:11 So I feel like yes, because they applied to go to that school.

1:01:16 So they did engage in the process.

1:01:19 They just so they’ve already been they’ve already requested the

1:01:22 out of assigned area.

1:01:24 Okay.

1:01:25 So we worked with a couple of those this year, I think, actually.

1:01:27 Okay.

1:01:28 All right.

1:01:29 I had a family that addressed me with that.

1:01:30 So thank you.

1:01:31 Yeah.

1:01:32 And I caution because every story is slightly different.

1:01:33 But in general, in that scenario, it would not be problematic if

1:01:37 a student was enrolled there and chose to go home to school.

1:01:40 They should be able to participate.

1:01:42 And they meet the eligibility requirements.

1:01:44 It’s eligibility requirements at homeschool are a little trickier.

1:01:47 So assuming those things are true.

1:01:49 Okay.

1:01:50 Thank you.

1:01:51 [inaudible]

1:02:12 So that’s a sort of.

1:02:14 Okay.

1:02:15 There’s a separate policy on foreign exchange students.

1:02:19 So I assume you’re talking about foreign exchange students and

1:02:22 students on a J visa.

1:02:24 Our current policy does give the principal the ability to either

1:02:31 accept a foreign exchange student on a J visa or not.

1:02:35 In practice, they accept them and it’s actually on our list of

1:02:38 policies to bring back to the board this semester.

1:02:47 There’s an actual separate policy for foreign exchange students.

1:02:50 Perfect.

1:02:51 And you’re going to bring that up.

1:02:52 We’ve got on the list.

1:02:53 I’m not saying next meeting.

1:02:54 It’s on the list.

1:02:56 That’s good.

1:02:57 That’s all I have.

1:02:58 Are there any other questions for the board members?

1:03:00 Okay.

1:03:01 I think that you have direction on that one.

1:03:04 Let me go to the next one.

1:03:06 The next topic is board policy 7440103.

1:03:10 Use of small unmanned aircraft systems in school and school

1:03:13 settings.

1:03:14 Carol Green, please address the board.

1:03:16 Thank you again.

1:03:18 This is also a new policy which is coming to the board.

1:03:21 The purpose of the proposed policy is to ensure compliance with

1:03:24 all the applicable federal and state laws.

1:03:27 Florida State Board of Ed rules or policies, et cetera.

1:03:31 It encompasses all of the NOLA language related to small

1:03:34 unmanned aircraft systems in school settings to include most

1:03:38 recently vendor types for for these vehicles.

1:03:43 It has a responsibility in there for teacher, student training,

1:03:49 et cetera.

1:03:51 Do any members of the board wish to discuss the other?

1:04:18 Well, if they meet the standards that are at the end of the

1:04:20 policy and the companies and the vendors that we’re allowed to

1:04:23 use.

1:04:24 Yeah.

1:04:32 Well, I want to echo that for getting those e-mails as well.

1:04:37 It’s really some of these schools have some really nice programs

1:04:40 set up that.

1:04:42 Yeah, I mean, literally grounded the program, I mean, if we can

1:04:46 do anything, you know, I’ve given my word, we’ll try to do

1:04:49 anything we can do.

1:04:51 So our department of risk management has really worked hard on

1:04:55 this.

1:04:56 And our I was going to speak for and second.

1:05:00 Yes.

1:05:01 So we have a coordinator of STEM and he is working to make that

1:05:06 communication clear to everyone working with all the companies.

1:05:11 So we are in constant contact with the state.

1:05:21 The law was passed. It didn’t come through the education

1:05:23 channels. It was intended as a business venture.

1:05:29 They originally had a way to extend the use of the drugs till

1:05:33 January one.

1:05:35 We didn’t actually get that there was a lot after January one.

1:05:38 So that link to extend ours wasn’t super helpful.

1:05:42 However, we’ve made a lot of progress. The state is looking at

1:05:46 modifying the language for educational use, for indoor use.

1:05:51 A lot of our drug usage is indoor. And we found some detailed

1:05:55 language in like this really thick administrative procedure book

1:06:01 that I’ve never seen because it’s not educational that talks

1:06:03 about payloads.

1:06:04 And that a drone is defined as carrying a payload. So we are

1:06:08 finding the language that would allow most of our drones to

1:06:14 still be used.

1:06:16 We’re working very, very vigilant and daily on it. We learned a

1:06:20 lot about drones.

1:06:22 And so in our drone competitions, we do do some payloads, but we

1:06:26 can make modifications with that.

1:06:30 And so we’re watching it literally every day. We’re driving the

1:06:33 DOE crazy every day.

1:06:35 And they do know some rulemaking has to happen because these

1:06:40 were, as my friend Jane Klein has said all afternoon, unintended

1:06:45 consequences.

1:06:47 So, thank you.

1:07:02 But we’re hearing from the parents.

1:07:10 Any other discussion on this.

1:07:17 Just so everybody knows that there’s a not only drones, but

1:07:20 there’s also many of the social media platforms and others are

1:07:24 now being banned from usage on federal property.

1:07:27 So space.

1:07:42 People just trying to make friends with their.

1:07:52 In section eight speaks that the school board is the operation

1:07:58 with basically the approval of the superintendent.

1:08:02 What do you guys feel about allowing the directors or the

1:08:05 principles of schools to see this policy says that nobody will

1:08:09 be able to utilize drones unless it’s approved by the

1:08:13 superintendent.

1:08:15 I think that would be for Dr. Schiller to determine his if he

1:08:37 has a designee in that process.

1:08:40 I would be concerned because there’s a lot of language with FAA

1:08:45 guidelines, and you know there are some, some real nuances to

1:08:50 the laws on drone footage and drone usage.

1:08:54 So, so every school that has a drone.

1:09:05 Yeah.

1:09:11 I’m just offering my knowledge on I’ve been drones for the last

1:09:18 month.

1:09:21 Or they have to be official school function, you can’t be a guy

1:09:36 who allows you to fly.

1:09:37 We have, you know, whatever it is, but it needs to be something

1:09:52 that’s official that that was my take on this.

1:09:52 The issue is, is that we have so many of these having site based

1:10:11 location to make the approval would be great, or maybe the

1:10:12 opportunity is to get into the principal principal and you send

1:10:13 it to that individual, all of those, we can work through that

1:10:14 process.

1:10:14 And one of the things I know is that as we start to go towards

1:10:22 this flip of programs and all that other stuff, I think it would

1:10:23 help with that and we’re going to say no, that we should have

1:10:24 that process.

1:10:25 The other thing is that the athletic directors, so beyond just

1:10:29 the games that we do, drones are used now for a wide variety of

1:10:34 action videos and stuff like that students are using.

1:10:37 So I just want to make sure that they were not going to inhibit

1:10:42 the use of drones for other productions from videos for

1:10:47 athletics, pre games and stuff like that.

1:10:51 You guys foresee this policy, holding back. I don’t I think the

1:10:55 current legislation is holding back a lot of a lot of those flexibilities,

1:11:01 I really, as you mentioned drone activities, be looked at all

1:11:06 over the world.

1:11:06 I really would feel strongly that they work with our district

1:11:10 STEM coordinator, just to make sure they’re following FAA

1:11:14 guidelines and those federal because you’re following state and

1:11:18 federal law when it comes to flying drones.

1:11:22 And I think it’d be very easy for them to just stay in touch

1:11:25 with our STEM coordinator. If Dr. Schiller proves that as his

1:11:29 designee, that would be my recommendation, because a lot like we

1:11:33 saw here the law just changed.

1:11:36 And so really having a handle on all the requirements is very

1:11:41 technical.

1:11:42 [ Inaudible ]

1:11:52 Yeah, or the athletic director could go straight to the

1:11:54 coordinator as far as I’m concerned.

1:11:56 [ Inaudible ]

1:12:24 They manage the actual game. They don’t manage all the other

1:12:28 portions of the game, which would allow them to do these videos

1:12:31 before and after.

1:12:33 I know that this is a big deal that many people may not know is

1:12:36 that they fly drones at the games for footage, and I don’t want

1:12:40 to shut it down because we’re because of this.

1:12:44 [ Inaudible ]

1:13:07 And then the last piece that I have for this is if somebody else

1:13:10 brings their drone and they want to try to use it for their

1:13:13 sports program at our facility, we are going to say no, right?

1:13:18 Oh, yes.

1:13:19 So the sports team comes in from Platte, Florida. Does it happen?

1:13:22 And they start running the drone. We have them running the drone

1:13:25 over the top. Do we have the principal ask the law enforcement

1:13:29 to tell them to take it down? And then if they refuse to take it

1:13:32 down, we can compensate it, right?

1:13:35 I don’t know about compensating, but we can take care of them,

1:13:38 bring it down.

1:13:40 That’s all I needed from my end. So anybody else got any

1:13:43 questions?

1:13:44 [ Inaudible ]

1:14:08 And if we start to allow individual schools to start making

1:14:11 these decisions with the laws confusing as it is being reworked

1:14:15 right now, we’re going to have tons of human error and the

1:14:19 potential for penalties, significant penalties.

1:14:23 [ Inaudible ]

1:14:40 Anybody else? Questions? Okay.

1:14:44 [ Inaudible ]

1:15:26 Are there any questions? Any discussion?

1:15:30 [ Inaudible ]

1:18:20 Are there any others? Any other discussion? There would be none.

1:18:44 I think public comments is good. The next one is the meeting

1:18:44 agenda item process discussion. If you guys can turn to inside

1:18:45 of your board materials, there’s a page that’s inside there.

1:18:45 [ Inaudible ]

1:19:39 If you look here, basically whether it’s a board workshop or a

1:19:42 board meeting, you would click where it says complete this form.

1:19:46 And what you would do is have the ability to fill out an

1:19:48 amendment to a policy or just a discussion item that you want to

1:19:52 bring up. Right? So if it’s in the board workshop, you would be

1:19:56 able to drop down the menu and you would put in there, this is

1:19:59 the policy I would like to go, like Ms. Campbell had said

1:20:02 earlier, this is section 3.2, whatever, and then just write in

1:20:06 there exactly what is the topic that you wish to discuss.

1:20:08 And give direction and hit submit. That way staff will get this

1:20:12 and they’ll be able to review it. That process would really help

1:20:16 not only organize us, but then also give more staff the

1:20:19 opportunity to understand what direction we’re trying to go on

1:20:22 some of these items. It also goes for policies discussion and

1:20:27 then on the board meeting you can do policies, topics or

1:20:29 discussion. Right? So it’s basically an idea of just kind of

1:20:33 organizing ourselves so that we can help staff and actually

1:20:36 streamline the process.

1:20:37 So what happens is, is that 14 days out we get our agendas.

1:20:44 Right? Seven days out it goes to the public. And the only thing

1:20:46 is that by Friday at noon, prior to the Tuesday, we would try to

1:20:49 get some entries in. Now the issue we may run into is that

1:20:52 lately some of these agenda items are locked in and stuff. We

1:20:56 need to start curving back from that and start putting them on

1:21:00 the agenda in that seven day period so that we want to amend

1:21:04 them and we can do so. Does that make sense?

1:21:06 Yeah, it’s kind of creating a more streamlined process so that

1:21:10 the direction from the board is more organized. I think it’s

1:21:12 good. And I think that many of the other staff members have

1:21:16 heard very positive things coming back from it because it’s

1:21:19 something that’s needed. So I just wanted to kind of offer that.

1:21:24 The idea is to try to get it Friday. And then what would happen

1:21:27 is we would not see each other’s all been mentioned that because

1:21:32 of sunshine, it’s not that it’s in the right direction.

1:21:35 As we’re doing this in the beginning, we may want to just all

1:21:37 get it the day of the meeting, like all of my review and

1:21:40 everybody else’s package because Paul’s concerned that because

1:21:43 of how many of them we may be sending because of the policies,

1:21:46 somebody may comment to somebody else in great sunshine. So it’s

1:21:50 better to lock it down and only make all of them available to us

1:21:53 the day of the meeting. And then prior to the staff would be

1:21:56 able to get it when we submit. Does that make sense?

1:22:00 So you won’t be able to do this marching, or not in a way that

1:22:04 would not be in others.

1:22:06 We use this just to go to staff so they can be prepared to make

1:22:10 the meeting, but you guys wouldn’t get it until the meeting.

1:22:15 So the idea is, is that it is illegal to where we can all view.

1:22:30 But in the first couple of meetings, because we’re doing this

1:22:34 for the first time, all the idea would be let’s send it, and

1:22:36 then not review it until the day of. And then that way there’s

1:22:36 no opportunities to kind of make a hiccup, and then we can

1:22:36 expand it to the rest of that project.

1:22:37 » So just making sure that I understand what you’re saying here.

1:22:47 So what we’re talking about today is that we want to add

1:22:47 something to the agenda, whether it’s discussion or whatever, we’re

1:22:49 going to ask for us to do that seven days advance.

1:22:50 But this Friday before is, if we have questions, what’s the

1:22:52 questions we’ve asked? We submit the questions so that after we

1:22:55 get an answer, we still ask them in the meetings that they’re

1:22:59 right, and they can have all the data.

1:23:02 » And to be honest with everybody, it’s going to take, if we

1:23:06 can all try to use it as a practice for New York, I’m sorry,

1:23:11 February 21st, and then we’ll just kind of practice it.

1:23:16 It won’t be in, hey, this is the only thing, but as we move, I

1:23:19 would like to try to get near the end of March to where we’re

1:23:22 using it officially as our thing, because I have a feeling that

1:23:24 we’re, like everybody else, we use it for about 70%, and then we’ll

1:23:27 improve it until we get to about 100%.

1:23:30 And we’ll do a better job of explaining it all, but I actually

1:23:34 did one. I started doing some tests, and it looked pretty clean,

1:23:38 and there’s an actual form that we would also be able to use.

1:23:42 So there’s a couple of options, but I think it’s a good

1:23:44 direction for us to start going in. If the staff can understand,

1:23:47 then we don’t have Dr. Sullivan coming up here trying to explain

1:23:50 the processes and stuff like that, and it’s actually fair to

1:23:53 them, because I don’t think we’ve been, I would be the first

1:23:56 person, I don’t think I have been fair to staff.

1:23:59 Through the years, because I have always just kind of thought

1:24:01 things that came out of my mind, and you guys may not have

1:24:04 understood it, and then I get angry because I’m like, I don’t

1:24:06 think I understand.

1:24:08 So this gives us that opportunity. So if anybody has any

1:24:10 questions, I think it’s more of a practice. Thank you.

1:24:13 No, I love it. I think it’s great.

1:24:15 Listen, I have $4. I am the lowest man on the total pool. Any

1:24:21 time I’m home, I always try to admit to it. Anybody else have

1:24:28 anything? Okay. If you guys can, try to use this, I’ll send that

1:24:30 per second email. Try to utilize this for the February 21st

1:24:34 email.

1:24:35 We’ll figure that out. And let me just say this. This is not a

1:24:45 Matt Susan idea, just so everybody knows. Tami and I are working

1:24:48 on this together. I will tell you that Tami is amazing.

1:24:51 I just kind of heard this together.

1:24:52 I’ll say something and then Tammy’s like, yeah,

1:24:54 and then she makes it happen.

1:24:55 In this regard, a lot of this came from Tammy saying,

1:24:58 hey, we need to come up with a process

1:25:00 and we owe this to you, Tammy, so thank you so much.

1:25:03 I really appreciate your work.

1:25:05 All right, so with that, we move to Board Policy 5136.

1:25:11 Dr. Shiller’s been very anxious down there.

1:25:15 Dr. Shiller, can you please address the board?

1:25:17 - Good afternoon, board members,

1:25:18 members of the public and staff.

1:25:21 Thank you for going through so much in such a record time.

1:25:25 You might hit your 4.30 deadline.

1:25:27 - Oh my gosh, I know, we’re doing good.

1:25:29 - We’re trying, we’re trying.

1:25:31 5136, Wireless Communication Devices,

1:25:35 begins our full review of the critical area

1:25:39 affecting student discipline

1:25:41 and many of the things that we’ve been talking about.

1:25:44 This is the first of a number that we’ll be presenting to you

1:25:48 over the next several board meetings

1:25:50 of student conduct and whatever.

1:25:52 And this is one that was kind of hanging fire

1:25:55 for a little while.

1:25:56 It originates in the Division of ESE

1:26:01 and Student Support Services

1:26:03 and Dr. Webley now has replaced Chris Moore

1:26:06 and so that’s why she’s there,

1:26:08 but it has involved everyone,

1:26:10 our Interim Deputy Superintendent, Anna Maria Cody,

1:26:13 Ms. Klein, Dr. Sullivan,

1:26:16 and we’ve also had a lot of input

1:26:18 that I’ve had from Mr. Wilson and Major Neal and Paul.

1:26:24 So what I’ve tried to capture for you here

1:26:27 is a consideration of a working draft

1:26:30 for the board to respond to

1:26:32 and to add its edits or questions or issues.

1:26:37 If you recall, there are a couple things

1:26:40 I would like to highlight and turn it back to you,

1:26:42 Mr. Susan, if possible.

1:26:45 If you look at number five,

1:26:48 the way it works at this point,

1:26:50 and this is one discussion point,

1:26:52 is that the entire administration of the policy

1:26:58 and administrative regs devolves to the site principal

1:27:02 and its leadership team,

1:27:06 which in turn, they may devolve to basically the teachers.

1:27:14 And the point being is that we have great diversity,

1:27:18 different kinds of schools and situations,

1:27:21 and we believe in,

1:27:22 I believe that’s the direction of the board,

1:27:24 to allow as maximum flexibility from school to school.

1:27:28 Obviously, what we hear of inconsistencies

1:27:31 is because there’s inconsistent application

1:27:34 from one school to the other.

1:27:36 And that’s perfectly fine,

1:27:38 but that’s just a policy point

1:27:39 that if the board wishes to reconsider that.

1:27:42 Second policy point would be that

1:27:47 we will find, and we have found,

1:27:49 that because it devolves from principal to the teachers,

1:27:55 you can have different teachers

1:27:57 offering up time for students

1:27:59 to make use of their wireless device.

1:28:02 So you can have and will be reported inconsistencies.

1:28:07 Another part that I’d like to bring to your attention

1:28:10 is that there was some consideration

1:28:12 of the fact that there are incidents

1:28:15 that are being recorded and then posted online.

1:28:19 And if you recall,

1:28:22 there was a scan from Polk County’s policy,

1:28:26 and we found in there where that such incidents,

1:28:30 and we wanna talk about that word incidents

1:28:32 because there’s a bit of a clarification

1:28:34 that staff members brought up this morning,

1:28:37 particularly led by Stephanie Sullivan,

1:28:40 is that this addresses fights

1:28:43 or those physical altercations being recorded,

1:28:46 of which there’s value,

1:28:48 but it’s the posting online

1:28:50 for which is not necessarily of value.

1:28:53 And we wonder, one thing for your consideration

1:28:56 would be to what extent you want that language

1:29:00 or you wanna broaden a little bit

1:29:02 about from not just fights, but to incidents,

1:29:05 including fights.

1:29:08 So let me stop here and ask if staff

1:29:12 have any other clarifications.

1:29:16 If not, let me just share a bit of data

1:29:19 that was given to me a while ago.

1:29:22 Just so you know, to date school year,

1:29:26 there have been 233,

1:29:31 what was called major considerations

1:29:33 of misuse electronic device misuse.

1:29:38 Percentage wise, it is quite low.

1:29:41 In fact, almost all of them are high school

1:29:44 and middle school.

1:29:47 I count maybe two or three elementary or major.

1:29:50 And I think we have to put this in perspective.

1:29:53 And resulting in 66 suspensions

1:29:57 out of school, one to three days,

1:29:59 45 conferences, okay,

1:30:04 with students, 32 with parents,

1:30:07 administrative detention, one day, 15 suspension,

1:30:11 in school, 15, okay, one day,

1:30:15 reteaching student expectations,

1:30:20 very appropriate if you wanna correct the behavior,

1:30:23 phone conferences, reflective assignment,

1:30:28 increased supervision, short term bus suspension,

1:30:33 three stay away contracts.

1:30:37 That’s a good piece of data to guide our thinking.

1:30:40 Whereas, there are minor, 2,392 reported.

1:30:48 Some high school, majority,

1:30:52 well, I won’t characterize what the majority are.

1:30:55 But put that in perspective,

1:30:57 resulting in 771 detentions for one day.

1:31:03 Conferences with students, 476.

1:31:05 (mumbles)

1:31:09 I’m sorry?

1:31:11 - Minor incidents.

1:31:12 - 2,392, Ms. Jenkins, I’m sorry if I was not clear.

1:31:15 - No, that’s okay, I didn’t hear what it was.

1:31:17 - Right, 2392, minor.

1:31:20 And I can go through the litany here,

1:31:23 but the conference is 476,

1:31:26 teach, reteach student expectations,

1:31:29 somewhere in the neighborhood of 252,

1:31:31 in school suspension, 244, confiscation of items, 125.

1:31:36 Conferences with parents, not a lot of heavy duty things here

1:31:45 but they are reported.

1:31:47 So, we’ve gotten the data.

1:31:48 I wanna thank staff very, very much for that.

1:31:51 Just to put in context.

1:31:52 So, how about if I leave that at this point

1:31:55 and turn it back to the board?

1:31:56 Thank you.

1:31:58 - Does anybody wish to speak to this policy?

1:32:03 - Yeah, I think it’s important to the role, I’m sorry.

1:32:07 - No, it’s okay.

1:32:07 - I think it’s important going forward,

1:32:10 we’re talking about the discipline of student

1:32:14 for misusing wireless communication device to the core.

1:32:17 Number one, you’re not supposed to be reporting

1:32:19 the user going to your age, we’ve got it.

1:32:23 I think it’s important to make it clear

1:32:24 as an expectation to our students

1:32:27 that when we use it to intimidate, harass, bully,

1:32:30 and post-counsel media that that’s also a consequence.

1:32:33 I don’t think in practice we need to do that.

1:32:35 I believe that when we read this, that comes from that.

1:32:40 There’s a addition in here on number six.

1:32:46 I don’t know how to put it into that.

1:32:48 - I’m saying you’re–

1:32:49 - It’s May 15th, I’m sorry, I don’t think it’s on.

1:32:54 Yeah.

1:32:58 The use of a wireless communication device

1:32:59 for non-educational purposes,

1:33:00 including but not limited to recording staff

1:33:02 and students without permission or knowledge

1:33:04 or recording fights is strictly prohibited.

1:33:09 Sal and Nicholas would argue that statement,

1:33:11 but the reason I’m gonna argue it

1:33:13 is I think we need to make it clear

1:33:14 of the intent of the posting on social media

1:33:18 because to be perfectly fair and honest,

1:33:22 it is our society’s reaction

1:33:23 to without a cell phone incident is happening,

1:33:25 not necessarily for a negative reason,

1:33:27 but it has benefited our staff

1:33:29 to resolve some really terrible issues

1:33:31 that have happened to some of our students.

1:33:32 I can speak as one that I know of

1:33:34 that was a harassment of a student in a bathroom.

1:33:38 That said, students maybe would not have been able

1:33:40 to communicate what was happening,

1:33:42 but up here was reporting it not to harass the student,

1:33:45 but brought it forward to a teacher or a staff member,

1:33:47 and if someone was taking this too literally,

1:33:50 that student would get in trouble for doing the right thing.

1:33:53 So we need to be a little bit careful

1:33:54 about the language we use here.

1:33:56 I think it’s really important

1:33:57 that wherever we do speak like that,

1:33:58 that we add the caveat of for the intent to bully, harass,

1:34:02 or whatever the right one could be,

1:34:04 or post on social media

1:34:06 because there’s no benefit to posting into social media

1:34:09 other than to spread it unnecessarily.

1:34:13 So, and that kind of goes around the rest of this policy.

1:34:15 It happens a couple of different times.

1:34:17 I’m not gonna highlight all of them,

1:34:18 but I just want us all to be aware of that

1:34:21 ‘cause our first instinct is to say,

1:34:23 don’t report that that’s so bad.

1:34:25 Again, we literally just had it just a couple days ago

1:34:27 and then probably today.

1:34:31 - I think a couple of us probably did say money.

1:34:34 Ms. Pauline, we had a discussion beforehand about this.

1:34:36 Do you want to weigh in

1:34:37 or do you want to have any stuff to tell them in a minute?

1:34:40 Like, I like watching them come all the way from the back.

1:34:42 - You know, she loves to come up here and talk, I guess.

1:34:45 She likes to be the voice of BPS.

1:34:48 - Right, right.

1:34:49 (audience laughing)

1:34:54 - I think many of your sentences are agreeable.

1:34:58 And I think that Dr. Sullivan had some ideas on this.

1:35:01 I think letting them get to it would be appropriate.

1:35:05 Why are you taking so long to walk up to me?

1:35:07 - She’s thinking.

1:35:08 (audience laughing)

1:35:15 - I agree with whatever everybody just said.

1:35:18 I think when we write the language

1:35:20 and the recommended thing that we’re putting in

1:35:23 that when students are posting it online,

1:35:27 I think is really the key.

1:35:28 I think that was the recommendation we heard

1:35:31 from our law enforcement representatives

1:35:33 and I think it’s really good feedback.

1:35:35 And so my recommendation was to not necessarily say

1:35:40 if they record something, there’s automatic things

1:35:42 that they’ve recorded and posted online,

1:35:45 that that is a different situation.

1:35:48 Just as a reminder, everything related to cyber bullying

1:35:51 is in our bullying policy as well.

1:35:53 We have cyber bullying discipline.

1:35:55 So oftentimes we may charge a student

1:36:00 with an incident of cell phone misuse,

1:36:02 but it’s really the other related incidents

1:36:06 that exacerbate the outcome.

1:36:07 So for example, if a student has their phone confiscated,

1:36:11 it might be a misuse and the action may be confiscated,

1:36:15 but then that student perhaps exhibits

1:36:17 more difficult behavior and it’s actually the other offense

1:36:21 that’s getting them the more difficult outcome,

1:36:23 willful disobedience, out of the signed area, cyber bullying.

1:36:27 So there are often multiple incidents

1:36:33 if the student is not cooperative from the beginning.

1:36:35 When the student’s cooperative,

1:36:36 it may end at the electronic misuse.

1:36:40 After that, it may be wrapped up in willful disobedience

1:36:45 and other type of higher level incidents.

1:36:48 So if a student’s exhibiting those other behaviors,

1:36:52 it doesn’t end just at electronic misuse.

1:36:55 It goes into potentially cyber bullying, cyber issues,

1:36:59 and like I said, probably most often

1:37:01 willful disobedience in my space

1:37:04 on how the student handled the correction.

1:37:09 I don’t know if that makes sense.

1:37:10 - It’s perfect.

1:37:11 So when you had that conversation wrapped around

1:37:14 the term fighting and some of those other things,

1:37:15 you guys are gonna lose the fact that you’re back with it.

1:37:18 - I think incidents is a better choice of words

1:37:20 just because kids come up with things

1:37:24 that are problematic for them to video and post

1:37:28 that are things we have not considered.

1:37:31 So it’s just my recommendation to land at

1:37:34 something like related to the word incidents instead

1:37:38 to give more flexibility as new TikTok challenges

1:37:42 and new things like that happen.

1:37:46 Doing that and so those are just some preliminary discussions

1:37:50 we had to try to support Dr. Webley in some draft language.

1:37:54 - Thank you, yes.

1:37:55 Okay, so I understand what you’re saying, Ms. Jenkins,

1:37:57 when you’re referring, my mic is not on there.

1:38:00 What you’re saying when you’re referring to

1:38:04 sometimes the phone being useful

1:38:06 in those very rare instances,

1:38:08 but here’s what I will say to that.

1:38:11 Where are we as society when the first thing

1:38:14 a kid thinks to do when two kids are pounding on each other

1:38:17 is to pull a phone out and start recording?

1:38:19 So for me, I am 100% in favor of no cell phone.

1:38:25 Nothing good comes there.

1:38:27 Our kids need to be able to speak to each other,

1:38:28 look each other in the eye.

1:38:30 They are struggling with that right now

1:38:31 because they’re so inundated with that technology.

1:38:34 So for me, I understand what you’re saying,

1:38:36 but I just have to go back to

1:38:39 I don’t think that cell phones are appropriate

1:38:40 during instruction time, period.

1:38:43 If you need to have them,

1:38:44 if you need to have them on silent mode or whatever

1:38:46 because of getting home, getting to and from school,

1:38:49 and you need to make sure you’re checking with parents,

1:38:51 so be it.

1:38:52 But I just feel like it’s a distraction.

1:38:55 Kids know when it’s going off and it’s in their backpack,

1:38:58 even if it’s on silent mode,

1:38:59 they see that little light flash

1:39:00 or they see the little blinking whatever.

1:39:03 And so for me, I’m just saying no cell phones.

1:39:05 That’s what I would like to see our district do,

1:39:06 but I don’t know where everyone else is.

1:39:13 (muffled speaking)

1:39:21 - I think no cell phones during instruction time,

1:39:23 meaning when they’re on our school campus, no cell phones.

1:39:27 Because again, a lot of times things are happening.

1:39:29 I got, you know, there’s bus fights.

1:39:31 There’s fights that are happening

1:39:33 in between classes changing.

1:39:34 Granted, they’re not being instructed at that time,

1:39:36 but they still are on our campus.

1:39:38 And so to me, I would love to see our kids’ first response

1:39:42 not be to pull a phone out and start recording,

1:39:44 but to actually step in and try to help in this situation

1:39:46 and diffuse it.

1:39:47 And so I think we have to do a better job

1:39:49 at teaching them those skills.

1:39:51 And if we keep on allowing for cell phones and distractions,

1:39:54 then we’re never gonna get there.

1:39:57 (muffled speaking)

1:40:06 - In that same result, I requested those that links

1:40:10 to those videos from the cameras

1:40:12 and it had all of that on them already.

1:40:14 So in many cases, having somebody record it

1:40:17 in the event that we can use it for something,

1:40:19 we’re already, we have a lot of digitalized

1:40:21 and a lot of places to record it also.

1:40:23 So thank you for your comments, Ms. Campbell.

1:40:25 You have something to say.

1:40:26 - Yeah, I’m not in complete agreement with Ms. Wright.

1:40:31 I think we need to carefully use this

1:40:32 because when you say structural time,

1:40:33 my point goes to you’re in class

1:40:36 and structural time is not as you’d hear.

1:40:37 It’s not much time, it’s not a forecast.

1:40:39 So if you’re saying during the school day,

1:40:41 I think we would define it as during the school day.

1:40:45 I do know that we have in expulsion hearings

1:40:48 and other major discipline issues

1:40:52 have the advantage of, we have cameras in a lot of places,

1:40:54 we have the advantage of students who turned over footage.

1:40:59 And I agree with you, I actually had a conversation

1:41:01 with my own child about, you know,

1:41:04 there was a fight and the person in state was running,

1:41:06 oh, what are you doing?

1:41:07 You know, we gang around fights and people can’t get

1:41:10 to there to break them up.

1:41:12 But again, it’s a pretty big expectation

1:41:14 to tell a network student to be the one to step in.

1:41:19 Sometimes we’re very big in this situation.

1:41:22 And I think that we need to,

1:41:27 I know this is a hard one because I agree with the thing.

1:41:31 I want people to have conversations

1:41:32 and they need to, you know, sell some of their distractions

1:41:34 but at the same time sell phones are also a tool.

1:41:37 And the tool can be used in a good way and a bad way.

1:41:40 I think we have the opportunity in our policy

1:41:42 to make a careful elimination of when it can be used

1:41:46 in a good way and it can be used in a bad way.

1:41:50 So, you know, and again, because of, you know,

1:41:55 when they’re in those times that the way the policy

1:41:58 is worded as is, on number five,

1:42:03 an authorized group of site principals,

1:42:05 site leadership teams, those are those lunch breaks

1:42:07 before school, after school, energy classes.

1:42:11 During, you know, after school activity,

1:42:13 that the site principals, site leadership can decide.

1:42:18 I’m fine with that because that doesn’t,

1:42:22 that doesn’t include instructional time.

1:42:25 And number six talks about instructional time.

1:42:28 It’s been specific, but I think we can kind of get away

1:42:30 from some of that on number six

1:42:32 because now we are one-to-one for the most part,

1:42:35 even though we did over the last couple of years.

1:42:37 We have kids trying to Google Classroom on the phone,

1:42:39 which is very difficult.

1:42:42 But now we’re a little bit more able to get away from that

1:42:47 because we have one-to-one technology in our classrooms.

1:42:50 I do think we need to make that language change

1:42:53 about incidents and about making distinctions,

1:42:58 between the consequence for recording it

1:43:04 and the consequence for using it,

1:43:06 and appropriately, by testing it online.

1:43:11 And I don’t see, you know, even in the world,

1:43:17 law enforcement frequently uses recordings of those kinds

1:43:21 to help with their investigations.

1:43:25 So, you know, to get every angle to get, you know,

1:43:27 so that we can get down to the bottom of it,

1:43:29 and I just don’t think we have enough,

1:43:31 we can put it on camera in enough places.

1:43:35 You know, I don’t want to teach our kids,

1:43:37 “Hey, you see something happening?

1:43:39 “I’m gonna record.”

1:43:40 We don’t do it, but sometimes it has been useful,

1:43:42 and to Ms. Jenkins’ point, I’ve been waiting for us

1:43:46 to find out, because we hadn’t been sent up very long ago,

1:43:49 I think it was last school year,

1:43:50 maybe it was being in this school year,

1:43:52 where a child attacked another child

1:43:54 that was in middle school,

1:43:56 and I said something to our children,

1:43:58 “What’s happening to the kids who did the recording?”

1:44:01 Because it’s like, they knew that it was happening, right?

1:44:03 That they can record.

1:44:04 It was just like a dismissal time, I think.

1:44:07 And our school made the point that that student

1:44:08 actually turned immediately the recording over,

1:44:10 and it was very helpful in the investigation.

1:44:13 And so, maybe didn’t know exactly what was gonna happen.

1:44:16 So, under what we might, if we make this change,

1:44:21 then we’re actually going to punish the child

1:44:22 in terms of who would have to punish the child

1:44:25 in terms of recording over.

1:44:26 So, I don’t know that there’s a perfect solution to this,

1:44:29 but I’m not ready to completely cut all of that out.

1:44:36 As far as the opening, I don’t want to jump

1:44:39 and head to the next thing, but I did.

1:44:40 I’m number 14, so we can talk about it briefly.

1:44:43 There’s that red word, “fighting” in there,

1:44:45 and just grammatically, I’m not sure exactly

1:44:47 what the point of putting that in there was,

1:44:49 because it says, “Students may not use

1:44:53 “the suffixes anyway that might recently create in the mind

1:44:55 “of another person an impression of being threatened,

1:44:58 “fighting, humiliated.”

1:45:00 Can we take that?

1:45:03 - I think Dr. Sullivan said she would be worse than that.

1:45:06 - Okay, okay.

1:45:08 That was a weird thing for me.

1:45:10 And then, just one other thing,

1:45:12 ‘cause I was looking at the Polk County policy,

1:45:14 and they mentioned, oh, on page 20,

1:45:19 and I don’t know if it’s on page 20 or there are page 21.

1:45:23 Okay, on page 20 of the packet,

1:45:25 so if you’re looking online,

1:45:27 it’s the first page of the Polk related Polk County garbage.

1:45:33 They have, there’s somebody who’s circled

1:45:34 and starting with, underneath that it says,

1:45:37 “No students may have, in the general possession,

1:45:39 “any wireless communication device

1:45:40 “or any other items that are coursed

1:45:42 “or transmit data during any standardized testing

1:45:45 “or EOC,” and when I read that,

1:45:47 I immediately thought of these things, smartwatches.

1:45:51 And I know when you go into SAT, ACT,

1:45:54 you can’t have your phone, you can’t,

1:45:56 you all can have a smartwatch.

1:45:57 Somebody can be texting you answers or whatever.

1:46:01 So, do we need to have, during those times,

1:46:03 I’m not saying we take away kids’ smartwatches

1:46:05 because it’s also, like, this is also my watch.

1:46:08 So, and for some, it’s their health monitor

1:46:11 and things like that.

1:46:12 But do we need to have specific language somewhere,

1:46:15 or do we have something else that takes care of it

1:46:16 so that during those standardized testing times,

1:46:18 we say, even the watch, just like ACT

1:46:23 and SAT administration, they go this way?

1:46:26 Do we have that already?

1:46:27 - As a former testing coordinator,

1:46:31 that’s included in all the scripts

1:46:33 and the language when we talk.

1:46:35 - Okay. - Yeah.

1:46:36 - So we don’t necessarily have a traditional language there.

1:46:40 But we don’t have anything in the policy at all

1:46:42 about smartwatches, it’s wireless communication.

1:46:47 - Wireless, WCD is anything.

1:46:49 - Wireless communication device.

1:46:49 - It’s all that. - Yeah.

1:46:51 - Okay. - Yeah.

1:46:52 - It’s just, we’ve always been talking about it

1:46:53 as a small company.

1:46:54 - Well, okay, so then I would say,

1:46:56 do we need to make adjustments?

1:46:58 Because when it’s also the last time

1:47:00 everybody didn’t have a smartwatch,

1:47:01 and I don’t think we’re about to say

1:47:03 you can’t have your smartwatch on your wrist

1:47:05 when you’re doing a classroom.

1:47:08 I mean– - Well.

1:47:10 (muffled speaking)

1:47:14 - Well, I guess, I’ll speak on the phone,

1:47:17 so that everyone knows.

1:47:19 Oh, well, it seemed like, I guessed that one right.

1:47:21 You were good.

1:47:24 Since maybe I’m the last one that has been

1:47:26 in a classroom around kids,

1:47:29 I would love the world that we could say

1:47:32 zero phones or cellular devices on a campus.

1:47:37 That to me would be like when we talk

1:47:39 about the dress code that we immediately go to uniforms.

1:47:45 I don’t know if that’s possible.

1:47:47 I think that is, instructional time to me

1:47:49 still is classroom when you’re teaching,

1:47:51 and I still think it’s a classroom decision,

1:47:56 and it shouldn’t, I don’t wanna say

1:47:58 it shouldn’t be that difficult,

1:47:59 but that teacher should have the backup.

1:48:02 I mean, we’re recording this,

1:48:03 so teachers, please do what you need to do there.

1:48:05 We expect the backup from deans

1:48:08 and building principles that you’re allowed

1:48:11 to control your classroom with this policy,

1:48:14 saying nothing is out during that time,

1:48:17 including seven years ago,

1:48:21 I’ve had kids take off their watch,

1:48:22 ‘cause you obviously lost that ability to have that.

1:48:26 You put your phone away,

1:48:26 and now you’re looking at your watch when I’m teaching.

1:48:29 We should still be able to do that.

1:48:34 The posting to social media after recording

1:48:39 absolutely should be an issue,

1:48:41 but I don’t wanna limit it to social media,

1:48:44 because having lunchroom duty,

1:48:47 many of that, much of the damage can be done

1:48:50 that you see 15 kids around a kid showing it.

1:48:53 So if they disperse that video in a harmful, hateful way,

1:48:58 it’s the same as posting it,

1:48:59 and we should be able to grab that kid,

1:49:01 and I don’t want him to say,

1:49:03 or somebody else to be able to say,

1:49:05 well, he didn’t post it.

1:49:08 So I don’t know where that discussion wants to come in,

1:49:10 but that’s harmful and hateful,

1:49:11 and that happens in classrooms,

1:49:14 but I do wanna return or continue principles

1:49:19 being able to control their building.

1:49:22 I believe it should be heavily emphasized

1:49:25 that if teachers don’t already do that,

1:49:28 to take back their classrooms

1:49:31 and have no phones out while there’s instruction time

1:49:35 going on, how do we get that across?

1:49:37 How did we miss it?

1:49:39 But currently, it’s out of control across the board.

1:49:47 We’ve been in classrooms now for a couple months,

1:49:51 and we still have kids,

1:49:53 some of us still have kids in the district,

1:49:54 and it is from perfectly ran in a classroom

1:50:01 to absolute chaos in a classroom on cell phones.

1:50:04 So I don’t think putting it in a policy

1:50:06 is the end-all end-all answer.

1:50:08 We need to figure out how we get to teachers and staff

1:50:12 and say, this is just the way we have to do it.

1:50:16 - Thank you, Mr. Churn.

1:50:18 I would like to weigh in before we go to the second.

1:50:22 I have a, I’m trying to keep my three minutes here.

1:50:26 Currently, let’s face the culture of our parents,

1:50:28 let’s face the culture of our schools,

1:50:31 and what we have is if you sit down and you watch

1:50:34 and eat your lunch, eat your dinner in a restaurant,

1:50:37 all you see is the parents

1:50:38 are not talking to their kids anymore.

1:50:39 They’re all on phones, right?

1:50:42 We go to our schools.

1:50:43 Kids in the common areas are not engaging with each other.

1:50:46 They’re talking on their phones.

1:50:48 We go, it has become such a pandemic,

1:50:52 and now research paper after research paper comes out.

1:50:56 Let me explain this one to you.

1:50:58 This one came out from the American Academy

1:51:00 of Pediatrics discouraging, saying that obesity,

1:51:04 irregular sleep, behavioral problems,

1:51:06 impaired academic performance, violence, less time for play.

1:51:10 All of those things are attributed to the cell phone.

1:51:13 Also, you have Harvard University just came out with one

1:51:17 where they talk about the clinic

1:51:18 for interactive media and disorders

1:51:20 treats young people who have excessive gaming,

1:51:22 social media, and other online activities

1:51:24 affecting their health and daily lives at home and school.

1:51:27 We are about to, we are embarking right now

1:51:30 on what is the backend of what we, of the cell phones.

1:51:35 And I have a feeling that if we don’t just say

1:51:38 enough’s enough with the cell phones,

1:51:40 that we’re gonna run into a situation

1:51:42 where we will be doing it a later day.

1:51:44 I currently have a very strict policy inside my household

1:51:47 with my son and my daughters

1:51:49 that they are not allowed to have screen time.

1:51:51 And there’s a lot different interaction,

1:51:54 and you can tell the difference in the kids

1:51:56 that have too much screen time in my kids, but just this.

1:51:59 And I personally believe that if we come forward

1:52:03 with a policy that says, well, you can’t overhear,

1:52:06 you can’t overhear, you can’t overhear,

1:52:08 well, you can record it, but you gotta turn it in,

1:52:11 that we just end up in a place.

1:52:12 Somehow, 20 years ago, we were a darn good school district,

1:52:16 and we were able to do it without cell phones.

1:52:18 And so I feel that a lot of what is going on

1:52:21 and pieces moving forward are only inhibiting

1:52:24 the development of our children.

1:52:26 So I would support Ms. Wright’s idea of just no cell phones.

1:52:30 You can have it on you.

1:52:31 You can have it in case there’s an emergency.

1:52:33 You can have it there inside of your backpack,

1:52:35 but you just don’t bring that.

1:52:37 And I’ll be honest with you,

1:52:38 there’s another thing that happens.

1:52:39 Many teachers will allow, you have multiple teachers,

1:52:44 so I’ve had veteran teachers say,

1:52:46 “We have new teachers that come in,

1:52:47 “and halfway through the end of the year,

1:52:49 “and the end of the day, they’ll just allow their kids

1:52:51 “to play on their cell phones

1:52:52 “because they’re not teaching to the end of the class.”

1:52:55 So what ends up happening is

1:52:57 they then enforce the cell phone policy.

1:52:58 So then what will happen is they’ll say,

1:53:00 “Well, we’re gonna do this educational thing.”

1:53:02 It becomes a literal disaster.

1:53:05 But if you just say no cell phones,

1:53:07 the kids might actually start interacting during lunch.

1:53:10 The kids might actually start interacting ahead of time.

1:53:12 The kids may actually start interacting like you do.

1:53:15 And I’ll be honest with you,

1:53:16 there are literal studies from Harvard

1:53:19 to so many organizations that proved this.

1:53:23 And we’re sitting here on the teeter of saying,

1:53:25 “Well, we’ll go halfway.”

1:53:27 But I feel eventually we’ll go a whole way,

1:53:29 so I’m willing to go there with you now.

1:53:31 That’s all.

1:53:31 So now we can go back through.

1:53:33 I just wanted to remind everybody, it’s 3.41.

1:53:35 We do have a volunteer policy.

1:53:37 So I got mine right at three minutes,

1:53:39 but then I had to explain the portion.

1:53:40 So if we can kind of start getting to the three minutes.

1:53:43 Seems like Ms. Jenkins is ready to go.

1:53:45 Go ahead, Ms. Jenkins.

1:53:47 - Yeah, so I got a lot to say,

1:53:49 and I will say it in three minutes.

1:53:51 We have been spending so much time

1:53:53 on this policy, months on this policy,

1:53:56 and now we’re talking about something

1:53:57 that I got through a public records request.

1:54:01 I don’t understand how it even ended up here.

1:54:04 The beginning of this conversation,

1:54:06 Dr. Schiller made it very clear,

1:54:07 less than 1%, .003%, to be precise,

1:54:12 are major interactions with cell phones.

1:54:14 And if you total it with all of them, it’s only 3%.

1:54:19 The amount of time you’re spending on this policy

1:54:22 is absurd.

1:54:24 We keep speaking in these broad terms

1:54:27 as if we are sitting in the classroom every single day

1:54:29 about how bad it is, how bad it is, how bad it is,

1:54:32 when it’s 3% of the issues.

1:54:36 We should be talking about the ones

1:54:37 that are way more significant.

1:54:40 20 years ago, we didn’t have cell phones.

1:54:42 We were doing fine.

1:54:43 20 years ago, we weren’t thinking

1:54:44 we were gonna go to Mars one day.

1:54:46 I mean, it’s 2023.

1:54:47 You’re not gonna get rid of cell phones.

1:54:49 That’s just an insane thing to talk about.

1:54:51 This policy makes it very clear.

1:54:53 They are not to be used in the classroom

1:54:55 if the teacher says it’s not supposed to be used

1:54:57 in the classroom or the principal decides

1:54:58 it’s not supposed to be used in the classroom.

1:55:00 Our teachers have lost classroom autonomy across the board.

1:55:04 This, how to manage our classroom now

1:55:06 we’re gonna start attacking, that makes no sense to me.

1:55:08 Our teachers, you have a right and you need to feel empowered

1:55:11 if you choose to not have it in your classroom

1:55:13 but your principal says it’s okay

1:55:15 and you don’t feel like they’re backing you up,

1:55:16 then please document it because no one can help you.

1:55:19 Just complain about it, is it gonna make it any better?

1:55:22 You have the right to choose to not have it in your classroom

1:55:24 if you feel so strongly about that.

1:55:26 So please feel empowered to do that.

1:55:29 I understand that there’s studies about technology

1:55:32 using excessive use and how it’s impacting our kids

1:55:34 and we’re all aware of that.

1:55:36 Our entire society is aware of that.

1:55:38 But as a speech language pathologist, I will tell you,

1:55:43 technology is very, very helpful

1:55:45 and useful in our school system.

1:55:47 It has to be used appropriately.

1:55:49 And we should trust our educators

1:55:51 as the professionals that they are

1:55:52 to be able to manage their classrooms

1:55:54 and make smart decisions for their students

1:55:56 that they’re teaching at every single grade level.

1:55:59 They’re professionals, they know what they’re doing.

1:56:02 The real issue here when you talk to a teacher

1:56:04 who complains about cell phone use

1:56:05 is if you ask them, do you write referrals anymore?

1:56:08 No, I don’t write them anymore

1:56:09 ‘cause my administrator doesn’t do anything.

1:56:11 Okay, well, if that’s true, or maybe you feel that way,

1:56:15 maybe you’re not getting the feedback,

1:56:17 but if it’s true, then what did you do about it after that?

1:56:19 Because not writing the referral doesn’t help you either.

1:56:22 So we need to empower our teachers to say,

1:56:24 here in this policy, you have the right to say no,

1:56:27 and please document it

1:56:28 if you feel like you’re not being backed up.

1:56:30 That’s how we solve this problem.

1:56:32 We can’t stop 70,000 kids from using cell phones

1:56:34 and technology, we’re just not going to.

1:56:36 And absolutely, you use it to,

1:56:39 Mr. Trent, I agree with you, I’m glad you caught that.

1:56:42 If you’re distributing it, you’re disseminating it,

1:56:44 you’re sharing it with each other, texting it,

1:56:47 absolutely, all forms of sharing communication

1:56:50 of that incident is a big no-no,

1:56:52 and that absolutely needs to be very,

1:56:53 very, very clear to our students.

1:56:57 - Thank you, Ms. Jenkins.

1:56:58 That was three minutes, that was great.

1:56:59 Ms. Campbell.

1:57:01 - Thank you so much.

1:57:02 Um, so, just really quick, and to your point of,

1:57:07 you know, maybe a teacher who’s, you know,

1:57:10 giving in too soon, right, and they’re not teaching

1:57:13 to the end of the period and allowing kids to be on their phone

1:57:16 that is not allowed in this policy,

1:57:18 because it says clearly, number six,

1:57:21 those kinds of things will be permitted,

1:57:23 technology will be permitted as approved by the teacher

1:57:25 or the principal, it has in, not, it says,

1:57:29 to engage in non-education related communications

1:57:31 is expressly prohibited, so that,

1:57:34 if you’re using it to play food or whatever,

1:57:37 even before, that was, it was never allowed,

1:57:39 it’s not to be allowed.

1:57:40 You know, I would just say, to the point

1:57:44 that there is a carrot way of doing things

1:57:46 and there’s a stick way of doing things,

1:57:48 and I believe that the carrot way is generally better

1:57:52 when you’re trying to get cooperation on something like this

1:57:55 and to, you know, when we have students

1:57:57 who aren’t communicating, listen, I’ve got three teenagers,

1:58:01 so I understand the communication issues,

1:58:04 but I also know that we’re talking about students

1:58:07 sitting around, we can say to self-image,

1:58:09 well, we can’t make them communicate,

1:58:10 but what we can do, and what is already happening,

1:58:13 is we challenge our principals to create better cultures

1:58:18 in their schools, and the principals can get creative

1:58:21 and their staff of how do we engage students,

1:58:24 even in things like before school, after school, lunchtime,

1:58:28 so that they are, so that there is a culture created

1:58:31 where people, where students communicate with each other,

1:58:34 communicate with staff, build those relationships.

1:58:37 That’s the carrot way of getting it done,

1:58:39 rather than the stick, by saying, we’re gonna take away

1:58:43 the ever opportunity you have to be in.

1:58:44 And listen, I am thinking along the lines

1:58:48 of Mr. Trent right now, that is not a battle

1:58:52 that I am willing to fight, because I don’t think,

1:58:56 I think the biggest problem is in the classroom.

1:58:58 I want us to stay focused on what’s happening

1:59:00 in the classroom, and honestly encouraging,

1:59:04 and making it clear to all staff, including the teachers,

1:59:07 no, you’re not allowed, oh, you can have the last,

1:59:10 if you get this done and you can have the last 30 minutes

1:59:12 to listen to music like that, no, sorry.

1:59:15 This says it has to be for instructional purposes.

1:59:18 So let’s hold to that, but I’m not ready

1:59:22 to go to a hall and say, we’re just gonna say,

1:59:25 you can have a new backpack all day,

1:59:26 but you can’t make those.

1:59:28 Certainly, some of our schools do.

1:59:30 I mean, the middle school was generally attacked,

1:59:31 had this confrontation last time.

1:59:33 They need to be allowed to do that.

1:59:35 Am I my child’s middle school?

1:59:37 No, they had it, it disappeared from the time

1:59:41 the bell first bell rang, and it could come out

1:59:43 to the last bell ring, and they need to continue

1:59:45 to have that ring to do that.

1:59:46 And even some of our high schools.

1:59:47 But I wanna continue to have the schools

1:59:49 to have autonomy, the leadership at each school

1:59:51 to make those decisions.

1:59:54 And again, just try to do it in a secure way

1:59:57 rather than a stick way.

2:00:00 - Did you, were you looking at the clock?

2:00:02 - Thanks so much.

2:00:03 - You nailed it right on three minutes, that’s good.

2:00:04 Good job.

2:00:05 All right.

2:00:06 - Okay.

2:00:08 - No, it’s Ms. Wright.

2:00:08 - Okay, all right.

2:00:10 So I appreciate the fact that I’m probably

2:00:13 a little more extreme when it comes to cell phones.

2:00:14 And honestly, that’s my parenting style,

2:00:16 just to make sure that our kids are safe and protected.

2:00:18 And so maybe that’s not where everyone lands on this policy.

2:00:22 Here’s the other thing.

2:00:23 We’re not following the current policy we have.

2:00:25 So I had the opportunity to sit in on the meeting

2:00:28 that Dr. Schiller held with the 1010

2:00:31 and teachers union, a few other people.

2:00:34 And the union provided a cell phone policy,

2:00:37 kind of a phased enforcement,

2:00:39 which I just passed down to everyone for them to see.

2:00:42 And this would be just adhering

2:00:43 to the current policy that’s in place.

2:00:45 So if we were just following what’s currently in place,

2:00:47 no cell phones during instruction time, okay.

2:00:50 And I get it that we have to phase this out

2:00:52 because this is a completely different thing.

2:00:54 We’re coming in now and saying we’re changing everything.

2:00:57 I think our district needs to give guidance

2:01:01 to our staff on what to do,

2:01:03 ‘cause it is all over the place.

2:01:04 It’s different from classroom to classroom.

2:01:07 And that’s very confusing for a kid who’s changing

2:01:09 seven class periods for them to know,

2:01:11 oh, it’s okay here, it’s not okay there.

2:01:13 That’s hard.

2:01:14 I mean, how are they going to be able to do that?

2:01:17 If we’re gonna say, hey, not during instructional time,

2:01:20 and that’s the route we wanna go, fine.

2:01:23 That’s a compromise.

2:01:25 You know where I stand, but I understand and appreciate

2:01:27 that may not be where the majority stands.

2:01:29 But I still think we have to enforce the current policy

2:01:33 and we’re not doing that.

2:01:34 So how do we get there?

2:01:35 How do we get to where we’re enforcing

2:01:37 what we currently have?

2:01:39 I think the cell phone policy enrollment map

2:01:41 is a great starting point that this district

2:01:43 could give out guidance and say, hey,

2:01:46 this is the timeline we’re looking at.

2:01:47 Obviously, these dates are gonna have to be moved

2:01:49 because this was done for a meeting that happened,

2:01:51 I think, at the end of January.

2:01:53 So I think this is a good visual just to give them to say,

2:01:56 hey, this is what we’re looking for.

2:01:58 I will tell you, I walk into classrooms and I see cellphones

2:02:01 and I talk to teachers, what are you doing about that?

2:02:03 It’s not worth the referral.

2:02:04 So while Miss Jenkins brings up the fact

2:02:07 that it’s only 3% of our students,

2:02:08 I would beg to differ that it’s actually

2:02:10 significantly higher.

2:02:11 They’re just not willing to take on that battle.

2:02:13 So they’re just letting it go and that creates a culture

2:02:17 that is just not productive at all.

2:02:19 So that’s my take on cell phone.

2:02:24 - Well, let me, let me, please, please, please.

2:02:28 I know what he’s, I just find myself in between

2:02:33 a lot of this and that’s great.

2:02:35 First off, I wanna make it clear that our community knows,

2:02:40 I mean, we’re with you on that you know

2:02:42 that cell phones is an issue in our schools and a big issue.

2:02:46 I’m not gonna rely on data.

2:02:49 I love data, so I don’t want any emails on that.

2:02:52 But it isn’t minor based on the data.

2:02:57 We, it would be if that’s all we were going on

2:03:00 and that data was realistic, like we said.

2:03:04 We’re in that classroom.

2:03:06 So our community knows better and I just wanted

2:03:09 to make sure on record community, I hear you, I understand.

2:03:13 We’re gonna do whatever we can.

2:03:15 It is an emphasis to get the, get your classrooms back

2:03:19 from bell to bell.

2:03:22 I’m not opposed to not having cell phones on a campus.

2:03:25 That kinda, to me, makes more sense for the new

2:03:30 superintendent’s vision if they agree with this also.

2:03:33 I think it could be something that we bring up

2:03:35 during our interview process because there are campuses

2:03:39 across the country that this has worked.

2:03:41 I’m not against it, I just believe at this point,

2:03:45 let’s get our classrooms back and then let’s move on.

2:03:48 We have lots of other things to talk about

2:03:50 and to be productive on.

2:03:54 So again, vision of the new superintendent.

2:03:57 Just because it’s a not now, doesn’t mean it’s not

2:03:59 gonna be talked about in the future.

2:04:00 I’m sure it’s gonna be talked about in the future.

2:04:04 - Thank you, Mr. Chair.

2:04:07 - Yes, thank you.

2:04:07 I’ve really been anxious to hear this conversation.

2:04:11 We need this clarification so we get a direction.

2:04:14 Yes.

2:04:16 Our biggest problem is the implementation.

2:04:20 But now we have the direction, I believe, from the board

2:04:23 of what is, then I can proceed with the communications.

2:04:27 I couldn’t act first and then come back and say,

2:04:30 oh, by the way.

2:04:32 So if I get the correct direction from the board

2:04:36 as I hear it, then I will then exercise putting into effect

2:04:43 the communications, the meetings with teaching staff

2:04:49 and administration because what came out of that meeting

2:04:52 a week or two ago was the issue of we’re not putting

2:04:57 referrals in ‘cause we’re not getting a response

2:04:59 or we can’t respond administratively unless we get referrals.

2:05:04 We can work that through.

2:05:05 But now that I have direction, as I understand it,

2:05:08 Mr. Chairman, we will come back to you

2:05:11 with some wordsmithing.

2:05:13 But it seems to me that the direction of the board

2:05:15 is such that the current policy where it’s followed

2:05:19 to the schools, who in turn determine from,

2:05:23 through the teacher, classroom by classroom,

2:05:25 the use of it within the framework of the policy.

2:05:28 And so we will go forward and then I will work

2:05:31 with the implementation if that is the direction

2:05:33 of the board.

2:05:34 And that’s where I think we just wanna have clarification

2:05:36 like you said in the previous matter.

2:05:39 Thank you.

2:05:39 - Thank you.

2:05:40 And what I would say to my three minutes here

2:05:42 is that we came together in early December

2:05:46 that we said we wanted the cell phone policy to be enforced.

2:05:50 And we went ahead and gave direction to do that.

2:05:53 And then somehow we’re now back at the same table

2:05:56 saying we want the cell phone policy to be enforced

2:05:58 and we’re amending it to include some of those other things.

2:06:01 From my perspective, Dr. Shiller,

2:06:03 what I would like to see is an immediate move

2:06:05 towards doing this.

2:06:06 ‘Cause I think that we as a school district

2:06:10 have a policy that has not been being enforced.

2:06:13 So although there’s a couple other pieces

2:06:15 that are inside there that we’re amending,

2:06:17 it shouldn’t take months to get this thing out.

2:06:20 This should be something quick.

2:06:21 And I think that you’re on it.

2:06:22 I think that your practice is currently showing

2:06:25 that you’re pretty much pushing pretty fast.

2:06:27 So I look forward to an agenda that moves it very fast

2:06:31 in implementation and gives our teachers

2:06:33 the right to grab their classrooms back.

2:06:36 Does anybody else have any,

2:06:37 try to follow them if they’d like to follow up.

2:06:38 - I know, I know.

2:06:39 - Hang on, hang on.

2:06:40 - As if we get clarity on the recording of the fights

2:06:45 and the sharing, I mean, we should have.

2:06:47 - I think that they got a direction on that.

2:06:49 They kinda reached in the direction of the board or not.

2:06:52 So Dr. Shiller, you’re pretty good.

2:06:54 - Yes, thank you very much for the clarifications, folks.

2:06:57 And we’ll bring that back to you at the next board meeting

2:07:00 and so that, make sure that the language

2:07:02 reflects your thinking.

2:07:05 Thank you.

2:07:07 - Ms. Jenkins, do you want to follow up?

2:07:10 - I need to make this very clear.

2:07:12 You often use the word we as freshmen.

2:07:15 We did not bring this up on December 8th, two months ago,

2:07:18 talking about enforcement.

2:07:20 There was a lot of things said on December 8th

2:07:22 and it wasn’t just that.

2:07:24 And it’s frustrating to me because we have not made changes

2:07:28 to the policy.

2:07:29 What you actually said back on December 8th

2:07:32 is that we needed a new policy.

2:07:34 And we’re not doing that because what we’ve discovered

2:07:36 is there’s nothing wrong with the policy.

2:07:40 And the data is important.

2:07:42 And if you say it’s not accurate,

2:07:44 then where are you placing the blame?

2:07:47 Because it’s not the policy’s fault

2:07:48 if the data is inaccurate.

2:07:50 It’s not the district’s fault if the data is inaccurate.

2:07:53 Whose fault is it?

2:07:55 Sure, it’s always great to readdress expectations,

2:07:58 to inform people, put that out there.

2:08:01 Absolutely.

2:08:02 But we’ve been running a survey for two months

2:08:04 about a policy that we literally have done nothing to.

2:08:07 We’re just gonna make it clear

2:08:08 that we shouldn’t be disseminating a video of something

2:08:10 to other students.

2:08:12 I think we need to be very honest with the public.

2:08:15 It’s not that it wasn’t being enforced.

2:08:17 It absolutely was being enforced.

2:08:20 But clearly there’s a miscommunication

2:08:22 through some of our staff members

2:08:23 of what their autonomy is

2:08:25 and how much control they have over their classrooms.

2:08:27 And for them to communicate to other people

2:08:30 if those things aren’t happening.

2:08:32 And the cell phone policy-based enforcement,

2:08:34 sure, it’s great, there’s nothing wrong with it.

2:08:36 This is literally just re-explaining the expectations

2:08:40 that are already in this policy.

2:08:41 It’s no changes to this policy.

2:08:43 And that needs to be clearly stated.

2:08:44 But what is right here in the beginning?

2:08:47 Teacher will refer students for cell phone violation

2:08:50 to administration.

2:08:51 That is step one.

2:08:53 And I’m not saying that it doesn’t happen

2:08:55 where sometimes they can refer it

2:08:56 and it doesn’t go anywhere.

2:08:57 I get it, trust me.

2:08:58 I worked here, I get it.

2:09:01 But that’s step one because we have so many teachers

2:09:03 who are complaining about this data

2:09:05 and who don’t do that.

2:09:07 Who just don’t do that.

2:09:09 That is the real issue here.

2:09:10 It’s not the policy.

2:09:11 And I think we need to be clear about it

2:09:14 before we speak to people.

2:09:17 - Okay.

2:09:18 - Thank you, Ms. Jenkins.

2:09:20 I would disagree the fact that this policy

2:09:22 is being enforced and I would also refer

2:09:24 to the minutes from that meeting

2:09:26 where we did give direction to this policy.

2:09:28 So that that–

2:09:29 - You said you needed to revise the policy.

2:09:31 Mr. Susan, please stop restating what I say

2:09:34 and/or rebuttal what I say

2:09:35 and acting as if someone cannot respond.

2:09:37 You do not have that authority

2:09:38 that is not an authority as chairman.

2:09:40 You always get the final word.

2:09:42 It is not okay, Mr. Susan.

2:09:43 I am allowed to have a different opinion than you

2:09:45 and you’re allowed to accept it and move on.

2:09:47 - But I don’t have to accept this recommendation.

2:09:50 - It is not a misstatement, Mr. Susan.

2:09:52 It is a report.

2:09:54 Just like everything else.

2:09:55 - So next up we have,

2:09:58 next topic is volunteer qualification guidelines.

2:10:02 - Yes, thank you.

2:10:04 This is another matter of administrative regulation

2:10:08 or guideline that’s been hanging fire somewhat

2:10:11 that we want, we’ve studied this.

2:10:14 I asked Mr. Wilson and Major Neil and Mr. Gibbs

2:10:20 and I whacked through a number of different meetings

2:10:24 and looking at different options

2:10:26 and an attempt to bring to you some clear-cut choices

2:10:30 as to what may solve the major concerns.

2:10:36 If I might summarize,

2:10:37 there’s an inconsistency at work right now

2:10:40 with the current one in place

2:10:43 in that an individual can be employed as a substitute

2:10:51 who has something in one’s background

2:10:57 but cannot similarly work as volunteer.

2:11:03 Go figure.

2:11:05 That’s what we’re trying to get at

2:11:06 as well as a couple of other cleanups.

2:11:09 So let me now please thank you very much for being here,

2:11:12 Mr. Wilson and Major.

2:11:15 Please.

2:11:17 - Good afternoon, Board Chair Susan,

2:11:19 board members and superintendent.

2:11:22 As previously mentioned by Dr. Schiller,

2:11:25 there has been plenty of conversation

2:11:27 in regards to the administrative procedures

2:11:31 for Brevard County Public Schools

2:11:34 volunteer qualification guidelines.

2:11:36 Can you hear me?

2:11:38 And with the direction of Superintendent Schiller,

2:11:43 as he previously mentioned, Major Neil, Attorney Gibbs

2:11:47 and myself, we deliberated about this topic

2:11:51 and created a few options for your review.

2:11:56 As you are aware, as it stands, our volunteer guidelines,

2:12:03 if one is arrested, he or she is not allowed to volunteer.

2:12:10 He or she is automatically ineligible

2:12:12 to be a volunteer participant.

2:12:14 But at the same time, he or she can and will be able

2:12:17 to be employed with the arrest record only.

2:12:24 In your packet, you have four documents.

2:12:29 The first document being the one that we’re currently using.

2:12:33 And this option, again, speaks to automatically disqualifying

2:12:37 a person from volunteering in our schools due to an arrest.

2:12:44 The option number one, which is the employment qualification

2:12:48 guidelines, this was the original option.

2:12:51 A person is ineligible to volunteer in BPS

2:12:55 if the person has been convicted of any felony offense

2:12:59 prohibited under any of the following statutes.

2:13:04 Option number two of the volunteer qualification guidelines,

2:13:08 the option district insecure, this option,

2:13:13 district and school security will consider

2:13:16 and carefully review eligibility if the arrest

2:13:20 is older than 10 years with no subsequent arrest.

2:13:25 Option three of the volunteer qualification guidelines

2:13:29 reads this option states arrest of any offense listed below

2:13:35 other than those highlighted in red will be considered

2:13:40 if arrest was more than five years prior to date

2:13:43 of application.

2:13:45 Any arrest highlighted in red will not be considered.

2:13:51 And if you have any questions, we wanted to get these

2:13:56 options in front of you for your review.

2:13:58 And we, our, Major Neal and I, and with the assistance

2:14:01 of Attorney Gibbs, we’ll be glad to answer any questions

2:14:05 you may have regarding these guidelines.

2:14:09 (mumbles)

2:14:15 - Thank you.

2:14:15 So this has been something that I have been concerned about

2:14:17 for some time honestly, because I’ve had a parent reach out

2:14:20 to me that was arrested 20 years ago for something

2:14:22 that was stupid and he couldn’t volunteer at her school.

2:14:25 She was volunteer of the year multiple years in a row

2:14:27 prior to, so this policy needs to be looked at.

2:14:30 And this is one of those things I, you know,

2:14:32 where it’s difficult, which what’s the perfect option?

2:14:35 Unfortunately, there’s not one.

2:14:37 Really, I understand the thought process behind

2:14:40 the arrested or convicted, but like the parent

2:14:45 that we had at the last board meeting who was arrested

2:14:47 and never convicted, she was wrongfully arrested,

2:14:50 but can no longer go into her child’s school,

2:14:52 that’s problematic.

2:14:53 So how many parents are we disqualifying

2:14:55 because of an arrest?

2:14:57 One of the things that our website says

2:14:59 is that there is an appeal process.

2:15:01 But yet, I can’t seem to find that anywhere.

2:15:04 And that seems to be not something that’s on a regular basis

2:15:07 done.

2:15:08 So is there a way to talk about adding the appeal process

2:15:13 to this volunteer qualification so that we were able

2:15:17 to look at these a little more frequently?

2:15:19 Because there are certain cases where I think

2:15:21 it warrants us looking at them and saying,

2:15:23 hey, that looks good or that doesn’t look good.

2:15:26 What are your thoughts on that board?

2:15:30 (muffled speaking)

2:15:41 Can Major Neal speak about the appeal process?

2:15:43 It’s in your current policy right now, the appeal process.

2:15:47 But I think what you’ll find, you guys hear me okay?

2:15:49 I think what you’re gonna find is because

2:15:52 of that arrest language, it is a iron tight guideline.

2:15:58 So the only way you could appeal that

2:16:00 is if you came in and said something to the fact

2:16:02 and had the proof, that wasn’t me.

2:16:04 You see what I’m saying?

2:16:06 That arrest language is just so, so hard.

2:16:09 (muffled speaking)

2:16:18 Yeah, I think that giving the ability for the board

2:16:21 to review appeal processes would help

2:16:23 because there are circumstances, like I said,

2:16:25 the 20 year old arrest, I mean,

2:16:27 and you’ve had an outstanding citizen who owns a business,

2:16:29 who’s very productive, and nothing else.

2:16:31 It was something that they were 18 and dumb and young,

2:16:34 and that’s, you know, everyone was at one point.

2:16:36 So I think that those cases need to be looked at

2:16:38 and not necessarily just disqualified right off the rip.

2:16:42 If I can add to what Mr. Wilson provided

2:16:44 to each of the board members is that

2:16:48 when you’re looking at option one,

2:16:50 and I’m sure everybody knows this by now,

2:16:51 that is how the guidelines used to exist

2:16:55 prior to the change, okay?

2:16:57 And I don’t think it’s in your packet,

2:16:59 but quite simply, you have the disqualification

2:17:01 from employment.

2:17:03 These are guidelines we use in the office.

2:17:05 You will find, with the exception of volunteer

2:17:07 and employee or whatever, they’re identical, okay?

2:17:10 So just know that that original was derived

2:17:12 from the employment guidelines, which is statute driven.

2:17:16 There are some things added in there that the district can,

2:17:18 because you as a board, you never would do this,

2:17:21 but you get to make up the rules,

2:17:23 as Mr. Gibbs will tell you.

2:17:24 There’s no property right to be a volunteer.

2:17:26 You can say no more volunteers ever,

2:17:28 until the next major changes their mind.

2:17:30 I’m not saying you would do that,

2:17:31 but I’m saying you have that ability to form this

2:17:35 to meet the needs of this current board.

2:17:48 - Thank you for writing that up.

2:17:50 So this is identical to our employment eligibility.

2:17:54 It’s kind of weird to me that it would be stricter than that.

2:17:58 Also, let’s be clear, before I was on the board,

2:18:01 but this policy was changed specifically

2:18:04 to target one individual in our community.

2:18:06 That’s why it happens.

2:18:08 Again, unintended consequences came out of that.

2:18:11 Now we have parents who can’t come onto the campus.

2:18:14 So I’m all for option one, because number one,

2:18:17 maybe it’s the same exact kind I want for staff members.

2:18:20 I don’t believe we should have anything to do

2:18:22 with the appeal process.

2:18:23 We are not judging jury.

2:18:24 I have no think of stuff like whether someone’s arrest

2:18:26 is more valid or less valid than somebody else’s,

2:18:29 but it’s still not part of this.

2:18:32 I think they’re not convicted of it.

2:18:33 Someone already decided whether or not they did something.

2:18:35 So I think that’s fair enough.

2:18:40 This is slightly off of us, but just brought me out there

2:18:43 to talk to each other and the staff to just kind of,

2:18:46 in a weird way, it kind of streamlines there.

2:18:49 We have an incident where someone was a substitute

2:18:52 who was just fired because they didn’t disclose

2:18:56 the juvenile incident.

2:19:00 And I would like us to have a conversation about that.

2:19:03 ‘Cause when you have a grown adult applying

2:19:05 to do something, a professional coming to just substitute

2:19:08 additionally to your job, and they don’t disclose

2:19:11 something that happened when they were a juvenile,

2:19:13 I would assume it’s because that’s kind of made

2:19:16 past you in life, or if it wasn’t something outrageous,

2:19:18 like murder, or anything to do with harming your child.

2:19:22 I understand.

2:19:23 But something way less serious than that,

2:19:26 I think we need to have a conversation about that.

2:19:28 We’re not gonna talk about that right now,

2:19:29 ‘cause that’s not literally what we’re talking about,

2:19:30 but I have a feeling it’s kind of,

2:19:32 the conversation kind of needs to streamline from here.

2:19:36 - Anybody else?

2:19:39 Austin, you can go over option two and three again.

2:19:41 (muffled speaking)

2:19:44 - Yeah, as Mr. Wilson provided to you,

2:19:47 option two is simply, if you take this,

2:19:50 the really only change between this

2:19:52 and what currently you’re looking at

2:19:53 is there be a 10-year rule.

2:19:55 Meaning if you haven’t done anything in the past 10 years,

2:19:58 then you’d be considered to be a volunteer.

2:20:00 That’s really the only difference.

2:20:02 So just think of it as the 10-year rule

2:20:04 to the current guideline.

2:20:06 Does that make sense?

2:20:08 Okay.

2:20:09 And then if you go to option three, it just,

2:20:11 and again, these are just talking points for the board.

2:20:16 Remember, this can be anything that you guys decide.

2:20:19 And if you look at option three,

2:20:21 now that becomes a five-year rule,

2:20:23 except for those highlighted in red.

2:20:25 So again, it’s just to spark the conversation.

2:20:28 So you guys can really tailor this

2:20:30 however you guys feel you need to take it.

2:20:37 - Does anybody, do you guys feel,

2:20:41 seems like you guys feel comfortable

2:20:43 with giving direction to that?

2:20:44 Or did you guys, do you guys feel good?

2:20:47 Dr. Shiller, do you wanna weigh in?

2:20:48 - No, no.

2:20:49 - Okay.

2:20:50 It seems to me that there’s,

2:20:52 if you guys are comfortable, you can give direction.

2:20:55 Go ahead, Mr. Shiller.

2:20:57 - I’m just gonna ask the conversation.

2:20:59 I don’t know that I’m quite ready to log into my answer.

2:21:06 But I, you know, one of the things

2:21:08 that has been discussed before,

2:21:11 I know I talked with my former superintendent

2:21:14 about, you know, when we talked about the change,

2:21:16 you know, as mentioned, there’s no right to be a volunteer.

2:21:20 It’s the right granted.

2:21:22 There are laws specifically about employment

2:21:24 and they, you have to follow those.

2:21:29 One of the things that we discussed was,

2:21:31 what if someone got off on a technical,

2:21:33 we would hate to be responsible

2:21:34 if someone got off on a technicality, right?

2:21:35 So it doesn’t count as a conviction, but it was.

2:21:38 But then there are those, and if the new consequences,

2:21:41 again, keep coming back up,

2:21:42 of people who were falsely arrested and things like that.

2:21:46 So I am not satisfied with leaving it the way that it is.

2:21:49 So I definitely think we need to get away

2:21:50 from the one we’re currently in use.

2:21:56 You know, between, you know, like I said,

2:22:00 I’m not, I’m not really drawn to either one, two, or three,

2:22:08 flexible, I have to think, I think the main thing

2:22:10 is we need to make change, so.

2:22:12 - Okay, thank you, Ms. Camp.

2:22:14 Let me, if I could just kind of give a quick summation.

2:22:17 Option two says that if you are arrested

2:22:19 for any of those that are there,

2:22:21 including the red ones that are in there,

2:22:23 then it moves to the, you cannot do it for them.

2:22:27 - Option three, you mean, with the red highlight,

2:22:30 you’re right.

2:22:30 - Option three says, if you’ve never been arrested

2:22:32 for these, you’re disqualified.

2:22:34 But in the event that you’ve been arrested

2:22:36 for something else that’s above five years or 10 years,

2:22:40 then it goes into that piece of information.

2:22:42 - That’s correct, anything not highlighted

2:22:43 would suggest that if you haven’t been arrested

2:22:45 in five years, then you’re potentially eligible

2:22:48 to be a volunteer.

2:22:51 - So that says that basically everything in there,

2:22:52 if you’ve ever been arrested for it,

2:22:53 you can no longer be a volunteer inside of our school.

2:22:56 But in the event that you, you know what I mean,

2:23:00 five and 10 years, 12 and a half, based on the conviction.

2:23:03 - And I’ll just add this, Chair, and back to that caveat,

2:23:07 I think Dr. Schiller started out with this,

2:23:10 is just don’t forget, you can still employ them.

2:23:14 So you’re always gonna be stuck back in that place,

2:23:17 you know, with any, well, with option two or three.

2:23:21 - Can I jump in really quick?

2:23:22 ‘Cause I think, just so everyone’s paying attention to this,

2:23:26 the first part for option two and three

2:23:31 is talking about the felony pieces.

2:23:34 So if you continue on, there’s the five and 10 year

2:23:38 for other offenses, just making that clear to everybody.

2:23:41 So if it’s been an option one, it’s not like a everybody

2:23:44 gets a green light or anything like that.

2:23:46 There are very specific qualifications there

2:23:49 in your solicitation, as well.

2:23:51 - Well, and that’s the, that is one of the–

2:23:53 - Like, I wouldn’t want to have some felony here,

2:23:55 ‘cause I want to make that clear.

2:23:57 - If you end up with one of them, you’re agreed,

2:23:58 I don’t want no problem with that one.

2:24:00 - And to your point, Ms. Jenkins, those,

2:24:02 that’s okay, the last page, those are district added items

2:24:05 that are not statutorily driven,

2:24:06 just so the board understands, okay?

2:24:08 - I just wanted to clarify, like, I’m not going to touch

2:24:11 the next one.

2:24:12 - Well, and just, here’s a very consistency.

2:24:14 At the bottom of this page, these are people

2:24:16 who’ve actually been convicted of these things,

2:24:20 but then after a certain amount of time,

2:24:21 then they can come back in and look what we have at the top.

2:24:24 You’ve just been arrested, so you’ll never get to do it.

2:24:28 So, that’s a problem, because we’re actually saying

2:24:31 people who’ve been tried and convicted

2:24:34 can come back in after a time,

2:24:35 but if you’ve just been arrested, you can’t.

2:24:37 That doesn’t need to happen anymore, either,

2:24:41 ‘cause all of that talking about conviction’s not a threat.

2:24:43 - Right, and for clarification on those particular items

2:24:47 on the back that are, that were basically created

2:24:51 by this district way before me,

2:24:54 ‘cause those are not statutorily driven,

2:24:57 versus what you see on the front page and such,

2:24:59 that’s all from statute.

2:25:03 - And I don’t necessarily have a problem,

2:25:06 but it does not honor employment, does it,

2:25:07 or just wanna volunteer?

2:25:09 - Yeah, so here are your employment guidelines.

2:25:12 They are there.

2:25:13 - They are there. - Yes, ma’am.

2:25:14 - Okay, and we legally, and that is their firm.

2:25:17 I think we need to be, right, they’re pending.

2:25:20 - And there’s other things like you’ll see on there,

2:25:22 like if you have any pending charges,

2:25:24 that’s a nonstarter as well.

2:25:26 So, if they come in and we know there’s a recent arrest,

2:25:29 well, we don’t know where that case is going,

2:25:31 so you as a district have said, no, that’s pending.

2:25:34 - We’re not doing that. - It’s on hold, right, right.

2:25:37 So, I think even if we don’t go all the way

2:25:42 to make it the same as employment, which is option one,

2:25:45 we definitely don’t need to have people

2:25:48 who have been convicted having more privileges

2:25:51 to come back than people who have just been arrested.

2:25:55 So, I mean, it kinda sounds like then

2:25:57 that would be going back to option one,

2:25:59 which is the way that it used to be.

2:26:04 (muffled speaking)

2:26:37 - The thing is is we’re responsible for this,

2:26:38 and if we say, yes, option three sounds great,

2:26:41 and then somebody says, do you know, you just,

2:26:45 here’s the loophole in that one, and now we’re stuck.

2:26:48 So, yeah, I would like to take a look.

2:26:51 - We’ll just take a look in the screen.

2:26:53 - I have questions about the review process,

2:26:55 because I know you said with what we have currently

2:26:58 in place because it is so very clear

2:27:00 it’s really not a lot of approval right now,

2:27:02 ‘cause they appeal, and then there’s not really a reveal.

2:27:09 I don’t think there, whatever,

2:27:10 I don’t know what the deal was or what it was previously,

2:27:13 but I’m assuming it was in the direction of a longer record.

2:27:15 With option two, what is written in red

2:27:18 is that the Office of District and School Security

2:27:20 will consider and carefully review eligibility

2:27:23 if the arrest is pulled within 10 years

2:27:24 with no test of an arrest.

2:27:25 So, that sounds like it’s putting it

2:27:27 on major appeals departments to make those calls,

2:27:31 and then option three–

2:27:32 - I really wish you’d take that discretion away from me.

2:27:35 (laughing)

2:27:37 - So, that’s my question, then who’s making the call,

2:27:41 ‘cause if you get scared about the appeals process,

2:27:43 what we decide to do, and then again,

2:27:45 and option three, it says will be considered,

2:27:49 but it doesn’t explain–

2:27:52 - Yeah, in all fairness, with the appeal process,

2:27:54 the way it was written is actually

2:27:56 that decision will be made outside the office,

2:27:58 I’ll keep it aside, and then it goes back

2:28:00 to Mr. Wilson’s office, if there’s an appeal process.

2:28:05 We were trying to separate the two,

2:28:08 because again, it would be nice if there was no gray area,

2:28:12 and that’s why I made the joke.

2:28:15 This is a tough one for you guys,

2:28:17 because you wanna get it right,

2:28:19 and I can tell you there’s a lot of differences

2:28:23 that are out there, but relatively,

2:28:25 all the districts are using employment guidelines.

2:28:27 They may have some differences in different,

2:28:29 some of you may remember you used to have an A and A plus,

2:28:31 and all that, different levels.

2:28:33 We got rid of that years ago, prior to being,

2:28:35 now everybody’s background checked.

2:28:37 You may have other districts that make,

2:28:39 let’s just say they call it volunteer level one, level two.

2:28:42 Level one is background check, level two,

2:28:44 they can come in and volunteer,

2:28:45 but have to be supervised at all times,

2:28:46 what you would think as a visitor, right?

2:28:48 So it’s very robust that you’re actually

2:28:50 background checking everybody.

2:28:53 You may be doing that more than other districts,

2:28:55 so you got an edge there, but it’s all in how it’s written,

2:28:59 and what that outcome is,

2:29:00 ‘cause there’ll be outcome no matter what you do,

2:29:03 but it all goes back to how do you avoid that?

2:29:07 I’ll use an example.

2:29:08 You recently had a teacher, unfortunately,

2:29:11 that was arrested in Satellite Beach.

2:29:14 He went through the whole process.

2:29:16 All those things happened.

2:29:17 The district did what they should have done, right?

2:29:19 You background checked him, you vetted him,

2:29:21 you did all those things,

2:29:23 and then this, allegedly, he did what he did, right?

2:29:26 So you’re doing the same here with the volunteers,

2:29:28 you’re vetting them, you’re doing all these things.

2:29:31 Unfortunately, sometimes people do evil things,

2:29:35 but you just gotta make that decision

2:29:36 on how you can best protect our students.

2:29:44 - Like, I feel confident where I am on this,

2:29:46 but it sounds very clear that no one else does,

2:29:48 so I don’t know why we’re bringing this back tonight.

2:29:50 I don’t think that makes any sense.

2:29:51 I don’t know how to change your mind in an hour and 15 minutes.

2:29:53 You’re telling the public right now,

2:29:54 how do you know what we’re doing,

2:29:55 and then in an hour and 15 minutes,

2:29:56 we’re gonna make a decision on that.

2:29:57 I don’t think that’s perfect.

2:29:59 I would argue to maybe, if even possible,

2:30:03 to have a conversation with that

2:30:05 with the greatest information,

2:30:08 maybe how many people in the denial of things

2:30:10 are making this up?

2:30:11 How many people have been done in this process?

2:30:13 Or, and obviously we can’t,

2:30:15 we can’t calculate the people who haven’t done it.

2:30:17 We’re gonna do the past test, right?

2:30:19 And, or, how many potential issues

2:30:24 you might have had when the old policy was in place?

2:30:26 ‘Cause again, I’m being honest,

2:30:28 this policy was revised to attack an individual,

2:30:32 not because something happened here.

2:30:33 So, I mean, before we make these decisions,

2:30:38 that should be critical, as a force.

2:30:40 We feel comfortable making that choice,

2:30:42 so that we do feel like we’re making

2:30:43 the safest choice for our kids.

2:30:45 I think that’s important.

2:30:46 - So, to your point, Ms. Jenkins,

2:30:48 we don’t necessarily track denials.

2:30:50 Currently, we’re just not set up to do that.

2:30:53 I don’t know if I can give you that actual number.

2:30:56 And certainly you made the point, and you are correct,

2:30:58 those that, because as opposed to what the guidelines are,

2:31:01 never come in.

2:31:02 ‘Cause they know they’ll never get past the process, right?

2:31:04 So, there’s no way we can know that.

2:31:07 - Can I ask, I just wanna add something to this, though.

2:31:10 There’s nothing stopping those individuals

2:31:13 for coming in as a visitor, is there, to our schools?

2:31:17 - No. - No.

2:31:18 So, right, they have to be invited and supervised.

2:31:21 So, this policy being rewritten the way that it was,

2:31:24 it was a false sense of security in some ways,

2:31:27 and it made zero sense, because it ended up

2:31:29 impacting a bunch of parents that are really good.

2:31:31 That are– - It did.

2:31:33 - It did, and then it disqualified far more people,

2:31:36 and the overall objective was to keep an individual

2:31:39 out of a school, which is still,

2:31:42 I mean, it never was really there,

2:31:44 because they can come in as a visitor anytime they want.

2:31:47 And that is the reality of the situation.

2:31:50 So, for me, as much as, I know that this is,

2:31:54 I know what this could potentially cause,

2:31:56 but it makes zero sense to have stricter guidelines

2:32:00 for a volunteer than it does for somebody we can hire.

2:32:04 That, to me, makes no sense.

2:32:05 I cannot understand why we would say to them,

2:32:07 “You cannot come in here and donate your time,

2:32:10 “but you can come in here and we’ll pay you for your time,

2:32:12 “and that’s okay,” and have the exact same background.

2:32:15 I can’t wrap my head around that.

2:32:16 So, I know where I’m at on this.

2:32:17 I don’t know if everyone knows where they’re at.

2:32:21 I know where I’m at on this.

2:32:22 - I have to clarify, I’m not sure if you should

2:32:24 be able to state that, and I’m not on the long view,

2:32:26 but I just, there’s a part of me that says,

2:32:28 well, not necessarily, so I just want this to be clarified.

2:32:30 Like, our visitors, clearly, in some ways,

2:32:33 convicted of child abuse, you know, child pornography,

2:32:37 stuff like that, they’re not on our campus, correct?

2:32:40 - So, if they are registered sex offender,

2:32:41 the whole Raptor Management System exactly does that.

2:32:45 It cross-refers them through the national database.

2:32:47 - Right, and the application, and the reason

2:32:49 for this really wasn’t, so. (laughs)

2:32:52 So, yes, the things that we really wanna protect our kids

2:32:54 from, they can’t, they can’t.

2:32:55 - That, I– - No, I’m not directing you.

2:32:57 I just wanted to– - I was talking about

2:32:59 the specific individual that we were, yeah.

2:33:01 - I just wanted to make sure we were not assuming. (laughs)

2:33:04 - Yeah.

2:33:05 - So, what I’m hearing everybody say is,

2:33:07 if there’s a majority going to,

2:33:10 if we’d like to go back to the first one,

2:33:13 I would ask to wait until somebody to roll it to it,

2:33:17 just so that we can make it there.

2:33:18 If there’s a majority, then we have to do it.

2:33:21 So, Mr. Tremblay, you had something to say?

2:33:22 - Yeah, just to be clear, Mr. Neal,

2:33:25 thank you for putting this together, both of you guys.

2:33:28 Option one, I mean, that’s my biggest issue is,

2:33:30 I just don’t wanna volunteer.

2:33:34 To be in that situation that we’re talking about,

2:33:36 you can work here, but you can’t volunteer here.

2:33:38 Is option one that option?

2:33:40 - No. - No.

2:33:41 - No, no. - No, it takes care of that.

2:33:43 - Right. - Right.

2:33:44 - It does. - It aligns them.

2:33:45 - Test them. - Test them.

2:33:46 That’s what I would recommend.

2:33:48 - That was my only concern is,

2:33:49 and that’s, ‘cause that’s the concern I’m getting from,

2:33:53 you know, the public, is situation after situation is,

2:33:57 I can go apply and get a job there,

2:33:59 but I can’t volunteer there.

2:34:00 So, if we can take care of that situation,

2:34:02 I’m completely okay whenever, Mr. Chair, you wanna–

2:34:05 - Dr. Shilling, you have a question.

2:34:08 - Yes, essentially, we feel, going back to the original,

2:34:11 addresses the issues that also overlays on that,

2:34:15 the most extreme offenders

2:34:17 that we have other laws and statutes.

2:34:19 But if you go back to the original one,

2:34:23 not the one currently in place,

2:34:25 it satisfies all that we’re talking about.

2:34:28 That’s how we live with it.

2:34:29 And that is what I would recommend to the board,

2:34:33 because I’m hearing the conversation

2:34:36 that addresses the inconsistency, shall we say.

2:34:41 But it also, to Ms. Jenkins’ point,

2:34:44 which is absolutely on target, as Major Neal said,

2:34:47 there are other safeguards and precautions

2:34:50 that wrap around to make sure

2:34:51 that the most extreme offenders are not in our schools.

2:35:01 - Okay, well, there’s a majority of the board.

2:35:04 If you guys feel like moving forward now,

2:35:05 you can all give a thumbs up.

2:35:07 I would appreciate the opportunity to leave

2:35:09 and ask a couple of questions to Officer Neal.

2:35:11 But if you guys wanna do it,

2:35:13 it’s totally fine, it’s affordable, it can happen.

2:35:15 So, if you guys wanna go, that’s fine.

2:35:19 - I’m out here with giving you more of the time

2:35:20 to make you feel comfortable

2:35:21 and have the opportunity to speak with Officer Neal.

2:35:23 That’s fine with me.

2:35:24 - I don’t, I don’t have to worry about it here right now.

2:35:25 - I don’t.

2:35:28 If that’s not it, I have to go back for your policies.

2:35:31 Make sure there’s something in there

2:35:32 and ask any of the questions to Officer Neal

2:35:33 and to Rashad and everybody else.

2:35:35 So, if I can do that, that’s great.

2:35:36 If not, then you guys are totally fine.

2:35:38 We can move forward and stuff like that.

2:35:39 We have a clear interest in what we explore.

2:35:41 And it’s not that I’m not in favor of it.

2:35:43 I just wanted to reveal it because as soon as we reveal it,

2:35:45 I wanna make sure that we feel solid behind it.

2:35:48 - If we’re bringing this up tonight, though,

2:35:49 doesn’t it have to be posted?

2:35:51 Like, we’re probably voting on something that’s not–

2:35:53 - This is a, this is an administrative procedure.

2:35:55 - It should be discussed for directions and superintendents.

2:35:59 - So, I’m sorry.

2:36:00 Where were we bringing it up tonight?

2:36:01 When did you meet?

2:36:02 - No, I was just saying that if we brought it back up,

2:36:05 then we would give the official direction.

2:36:06 But it’s for one way or another.

2:36:08 So, I’m okay with giving the direction.

2:36:10 And if there’s anything that pops up,

2:36:11 you guys, it’s an administrative procedure.

2:36:13 We can bring it back in two weeks and readjust it.

2:36:15 - So, I just wanna clarify, I was understood.

2:36:17 That’s why I said it doesn’t make sense

2:36:18 for you why we’re bringing this up in an hour

2:36:20 because we’re not voting on it.

2:36:21 I don’t understand.

2:36:22 - It’s just–

2:36:23 - So, we’re just discussing it.

2:36:24 - There’s, and the individual we’re talking about

2:36:26 has nothing to do with the decision that I’m making right now.

2:36:28 There’s three other individuals.

2:36:30 And I need to make sure that those individuals

2:36:32 are gonna get through.

2:36:33 - That’s it.

2:36:34 - And I just wanted to make sure.

2:36:35 But you guys, listen, if I have an issue,

2:36:37 then we’ll work on it.

2:36:38 You guys get the direction, okay?

2:36:40 Do you feel confident in what you heard, Dr. Schone?

2:36:43 - Yes, sir.

2:36:44 I believe that what I hear is that

2:36:47 there may be some clarifications that some of you want

2:36:50 and that I’ll bring back this for the board.

2:36:54 If the board wishes to then take formal action,

2:36:58 it can do that.

2:36:59 If not, under the current board policy,

2:37:02 then I have the authority to go forward

2:37:04 to communicate and implement.

2:37:06 And basically, that’s how we would go

2:37:08 if I read this board intention correctly.

2:37:12 - Okay, the other thing that,

2:37:15 so we have five minutes, right?

2:37:16 And one of the things that I was gonna mention to you

2:37:19 is that from here, let me read this thing real quick.

2:37:23 Have in that we start getting into

2:37:25 the board responsibilities guide and stuff like that, right?

2:37:31 One of the things that I would like to just kind of

2:37:33 throw out there, I truly wanted to end at 4.30

2:37:37 and Dr. Schiller was like,

2:37:38 we can roll these to discussion tonight.

2:37:39 It’s not a big deal.

2:37:40 We do need some time and give the people

2:37:43 at the individual the appropriate time to do that.

2:37:45 But these, when you talk about responsibilities

2:37:47 and authority, board powers, member powers, all of that,

2:37:50 they can be one policy that all of them came to it.

2:37:53 It doesn’t have to be separate policy and on top of that,

2:37:56 you have, they’re all defined by state statute.

2:37:59 So I think that if we bring this back,

2:38:01 it’ll be a pretty quick discussion.

2:38:02 I don’t think that we’re gonna end up,

2:38:03 but it is gonna take more than five minutes to run.

2:38:06 So if you guys are okay with that,

2:38:08 I had one thing at the end that I wanted to talk about,

2:38:11 but I would like to shift the board powers,

2:38:17 member powers, legislative policy making,

2:38:19 responsibilities and authority to the board tonight,

2:38:22 because I think that it’s defined in statute.

2:38:24 It’s not like, you know what I mean?

2:38:26 We can’t give ourselves more power than is defined.

2:38:28 So there’s that, but I wanted to give Dr. Shiller,

2:38:30 if you feel that you can do yours in four minutes,

2:38:33 then we can do that.

2:38:34 If not, we can roll that out.

2:38:35 - These are yours. - Correct.

2:38:37 - And if you notice that many of them have been in place

2:38:41 for some years, if the board wishes to say, yes,

2:38:45 that is, we understand the statute, article four,

2:38:50 then you have completed your review

2:38:52 and then it would go through the process.

2:38:54 If indeed you find something at variance here,

2:38:58 then of course you can defer.

2:39:00 In terms of putting them all in one,

2:39:04 the bylaws that you have right now have them segmented.

2:39:10 - And each one of them has a different statute.

2:39:12 - That’s right, and so that’s why I would suggest

2:39:16 that we don’t change the, your board policy book

2:39:18 instead of very nicely, Neola’s doing it.

2:39:21 But I just think that this newly constituted board,

2:39:25 and again, gives you the opportunity also for us

2:39:29 to be able to get some clarification

2:39:31 as part of an in-service opportunity.

2:39:33 - Absolutely, and I think Dr. Shiller will bring that

2:39:36 into perspective of what we’re supposed to do

2:39:38 from previous meetings.

2:39:39 We can come back and discuss this.

2:39:40 I don’t think it can take that much time.

2:39:43 Yeah, he’s discussing tonight, but that’s okay.

2:39:45 - There’s only one that I have.

2:39:46 - Okay, and then what I did wanna mention to you guys

2:39:50 is that we’re seeing this today and some other stuff.

2:39:54 I’d like to move forward with having our workshops,

2:39:58 I have two options here,

2:39:59 workshops starting at nine o’clock

2:40:01 so that we can work through the day

2:40:02 and then come back and do a school board meeting.

2:40:04 It would allow us to get through a lot

2:40:06 of what we’re dealing with right now.

2:40:07 We came up short tonight, but I wanted to do that.

2:40:11 Or we could open up another workshop day

2:40:16 where we discuss ‘em all on a Thursday.

2:40:19 Just so everybody knows, prior to when I first came

2:40:22 on the board, we did start our workshops at nine o’clock.

2:40:25 Being the fact that some of us have full-time jobs,

2:40:28 doing it all in one day works out.

2:40:30 But I’m moving this into independent conversation.

2:40:33 I’d like to move to having it starting at nine o’clock

2:40:35 on our days that we have school board meetings.

2:40:37 So if somebody wanted to come speak

2:40:39 or they needed to take time off,

2:40:40 we could do that for both of them.

2:40:42 But I would be willing to listen to somebody

2:40:43 if they wanted to open up two Thursdays a month

2:40:46 to having all day workshops.

2:40:48 So with that, I was gonna offer it up to you guys.

2:40:51 Any conversations, Ms. Campbell,

2:40:52 you’ve had some conversations with me?

2:40:54 - Yeah, or if I, no, I’m sorry.

2:40:58 I think the long days, I know that people do it,

2:41:04 but the long days are really hard.

2:41:07 For that much decision-making,

2:41:09 it’s a lot of content.

2:41:10 I don’t actually think it would be a good idea

2:41:12 for us to schedule ourselves so much in due

2:41:15 that we are gonna have to make decisions

2:41:16 from nine to four, and then again from 5.30

2:41:19 to whenever we’re done.

2:41:21 Because sometimes we were ready to go to 8.30,

2:41:23 nine, nine, 10 o’clock.

2:41:25 We started at nine o’clock in the morning.

2:41:27 We’re getting fresh, we’re toast.

2:41:30 So if we wanted, there have been times

2:41:33 when we didn’t have several all the time,

2:41:35 and then we start the meeting at one.

2:41:36 Honestly, we could have done that today,

2:41:38 except for the last week, I mean, you all are coming.

2:41:41 But, you know, let’s start an hour earlier or whatever.

2:41:45 I’m not fond of the idea of the all-day marathon meeting

2:41:50 because I think it’s gonna be a lot of content

2:41:53 for us to get through and to be prepared for,

2:41:56 and to do it with excellence

2:41:59 that I think would have caught us wrong.

2:42:00 - I think, just so everybody knows,

2:42:02 if we were to schedule it at nine

2:42:04 and we were able to get through it quicker,

2:42:07 like it was a smaller amount, then we would finish,

2:42:10 and we would have the rest of the day

2:42:11 wasn’t even planned out.

2:42:13 I think one of the issues I had,

2:42:14 I could speak directly to that,

2:42:16 was that we have it to where like,

2:42:19 if we don’t put it out there at nine o’clock,

2:42:21 then we have all these other engagements

2:42:23 that we end up filling into the calendar,

2:42:24 and then all of a sudden we have board members

2:42:26 that aren’t present and stuff like that.

2:42:28 I understand what you’re saying about coming down an hour,

2:42:31 but we literally have a large amount of policies

2:42:34 and stuff like that that means we review.

2:42:36 It just came up short today,

2:42:37 so I would say that we’re going to see more of this,

2:42:40 and we need to finish the time.

2:42:41 So I’d like to figure out if either we move

2:42:44 to nine o’clock in the morning,

2:42:45 or can you go to the morning

2:42:47 and move to two separate days in the first day?

2:42:51 - So I– - That’s my comment.

2:42:52 That doesn’t mean that that’s what we’re supposed to do.

2:42:55 - So I don’t see the point in it at all.

2:43:00 I’ve been on this board for two years.

2:43:01 If there was a heavy day, we moved in an hour before then,

2:43:03 and everything got done.

2:43:05 Even today, heavy load, the only thing left over

2:43:08 was a bunch of individual policies

2:43:10 that will probably be discussed in 10 minutes.

2:43:12 We’re only stopping because we want to have the gas

2:43:14 between the board and the day.

2:43:16 I don’t think it’s necessary at all.

2:43:17 If we start them at nine in the morning,

2:43:18 we’re taking staff away from their day jobs additionally,

2:43:21 again, for really no purpose.

2:43:25 We’re eating the daytime.

2:43:26 Quite often, I’ll do something before my workshop

2:43:29 at a school, so if you’re just eating my entire Tuesday,

2:43:33 then it’s absolutely necessary.

2:43:36 We can adjust like we did over the past few years,

2:43:39 but there’s literally zero reason

2:43:40 to also have a nine-to-one workshop

2:43:42 every single time we’re meeting.

2:43:44 Some of these things, yeah, they need to get reviewed,

2:43:46 but there’s visual emergency to be reviewed.

2:43:48 They don’t have to get done right away.

2:43:52 I don’t know.

2:43:53 I don’t see the point in that.

2:43:58 My concern always is are staff’s lines being used

2:44:02 appropriately and efficiently,

2:44:06 and I don’t think that’s how we’re going to be doing that.

2:44:11 If we feel like the old schedule isn’t working for us

2:44:14 for some reason, then I think we can have that conversation,

2:44:16 but we haven’t even done the old schedule yet,

2:44:19 except for today, and we really didn’t have a problem with it

2:44:21 so I think we’re extending our day for no reason.

2:44:24 It leads to more conversations for no reason.

2:44:26 I think we need to just stay on track and see how it works out.

2:44:30 - Thank you, Ms. Jenkins.

2:44:31 - I would make the comment that our load amount

2:44:35 is going to increase.

2:44:37 I would also say that staff – -Mr.

2:44:38 Susan, why do you always get to comment

2:44:41 in additional times compared to everybody else?

2:44:43 -Just because I brought this forward.

2:44:44 -No, no, Mr. Susan, no.

2:44:46 Ask Mr. Trev or Ms. Craig.

2:44:47 You speak about robs from the border very often.

2:44:50 I’m going to throw them back at you, Mr. Susan.

2:44:52 -Thank you, Ms. Jenkins. -We heard you.

2:44:54 You restated yourself twice.

2:44:56 It’s someone else’s turn.

2:45:00 -So anyways – -You also don’t have authority

2:45:03 to shut them off. -I absolutely do.

2:45:05 -No, you do not. -Mr.

2:45:07 Gibbs, does Mr. Susan have the authority

2:45:09 to shut another border off? -It’s past 4.30.

2:45:12 -Point of order. -Point of order.

2:45:16 -Okay, point of order. It’s not your turn.

2:45:18 -Jenkins. -No.

2:45:19 -Ms. Jenkins, please. -No, sir.

2:45:21 I’m tired, as you think, Mr. Stupfel, as well.

2:45:23 I’m tired of it. -How do you feel about it?

2:45:27 -Well, when talking about the amount of work

2:45:30 that we need to get done,

2:45:31 obviously we’re going to give that decision,

2:45:35 honestly, between you three.

2:45:36 We’re going to weigh in on it because you’ve been here

2:45:38 for two years, four years, six years, whatever it is.

2:45:41 We got through quite a bit.

2:45:44 So I think it would be good for me to sit here and say,

2:45:48 “No, we need to be here from nine to four.

2:45:49 No, we need to be here from two to four.”

2:45:51 ‘Cause this is our first time through this workload.

2:45:54 But we will – You know, we’re going to maybe play this

2:45:58 by ear, again, in between.

2:46:00 Is it a 12 to 4 if we really think we need

2:46:02 and have a whole lot of work to do?

2:46:05 And if we get through that and we have time to spare,

2:46:08 then we can say, “Hey, maybe 12 to 4 was too much time.”

2:46:11 You know, I do appreciate the morning time

2:46:14 to get things done, as well.

2:46:16 But again, you’ve been through this,

2:46:18 and I am going to say I’m a junior board member on this.

2:46:22 -One of the issues that you’re going to face is –

2:46:30 So if we have a large workload,

2:46:32 which we have for the next probably 10 board meetings,

2:46:35 we are going to need as much time.

2:46:38 It’s not a question of how much time we have.

2:46:40 The question is whether we’re going to need it.

2:46:43 It’s just whether we move it from one day or to a third day.

2:46:47 And for some of us, it would be smarter to go ahead

2:46:51 and do it on the same day

2:46:53 so that we’re not impacting another dead bug.

2:46:56 I mean, we ask some of our teachers to do the same.

2:46:59 They go to work at 730, and they’re working night and day.

2:47:02 So that’s my thought process.

2:47:04 -So, what I would say is that it is the same amount of time

2:47:08 whether you do it over two days or one day.

2:47:10 The workload is not going to change based on us

2:47:13 doing – starting at 9 a.m. or 2 p.m.

2:47:17 When I’m looking at scheduling out my days, personally –

2:47:19 ‘Cause, Katie, you’re in the same boat.

2:47:22 South end, I’m in the north end.

2:47:23 So we have travel time back and forth.

2:47:25 So whenever – Huh?

2:47:28 Yeah, so, I mean, yeah, so we’re kind of – we are here.

2:47:31 Well, it just depends on how long we go for.

2:47:35 For me, I would rather –

2:47:37 I would rather condense it into a day

2:47:39 and then commit that day to my board in-house.

2:47:42 This is what we’re doing, and that way,

2:47:43 I have the other rest of the days to go to my schools

2:47:46 and attend the committee meetings

2:47:48 that we’re on and all the other things.

2:47:49 But that’s my personal preference.

2:47:51 I don’t – Again, it’s the majority that rules on this one.

2:47:55 But that’s my personal preference.

2:47:56 -I’ll be honest with you guys, 9 o’clock would be

2:47:59 the suggested time for the next board meeting

2:48:01 because we have a lot of time, okay?

2:48:04 Maybe what the idea is is that we schedule a phenomenon

2:48:07 and then we just think about it moving forward

2:48:09 and don’t think there’s a consensus on it.

2:48:11 -I just want to – I just want to remind you

2:48:12 that the reason why we have a lot

2:48:14 under the next several board meetings

2:48:15 is because we chose to do it that way.

2:48:17 Because we chose to go ahead and plow through,

2:48:20 you know, dozens of policies every month.

2:48:23 So we can slow that down to any point.

2:48:27 You know, we could even say,

2:48:29 instead of talking at least 9 to 9,

2:48:31 we could say, you know, let’s commit

2:48:33 to going through 30 minutes of these.

2:48:35 And if we don’t do that, we push them off to the next time.

2:48:38 There’s no rush except for our own rush

2:48:40 on the bottom of things.

2:48:44 But if we wanted to talk about this more tonight,

2:48:46 I would suggest that you go ahead and stop

2:48:48 and talk about it more tonight, if you want.

2:48:50 -Let’s go. Let’s go. -Great.

2:48:52 -All right.

2:49:16 -Thank you. -Thank you.