Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Friday, September 19, 2014

Keep military gear out of Texas schools By Brennan Griffin, Sept. 18, 2014

Thursday, September 11, 2014

In Utah, Teachers Can Carry Guns Into School and Not Tell Anyone By Zoë Schlanger Filed: 9/11/14 at 1:46 PM | Updated: 9/11/14 at 2:59 PM

http://www.newsweek.com/utah-teachers-can-carry-guns-school-and-not-tell-anyone-269923

Briefing - Providing testimony for Social Studies textbook adoption at t...

Is the Drugging of Foster Kids the New Norm? Sep. 8, 2014 11:00am http://www.theblaze.com/contributions/is-the-drugging-of-foster-kids-the-new-norm/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=story&utm_campaign=ShareButtons

http://www.theblaze.com/contributions/is-the-drugging-of-foster-kids-the-new-norm/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=story&utm_campaign=ShareButtons

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

I am ME! 我係周耀輝

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: Annise Parker, Office of the Mayor | City of Houst...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: Annise Parker, Office of the Mayor | City of Houst...: Post by Annise Parker, Office of the Mayor | City of Houston .

NCISD rolls out district-wide Chromebooks New Caney Independent School District rolled out the first installment of some 10,772 Chromebook devices Tuesday at Porter High School. YOURHOUSTONNEWS.COM

Vaccines-Calling the Shots

Use a Facebook Group to Fight Crime in Your Neighborhood | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Use a Facebook Group to Fight Crime in Your Neighborhood | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

MSNBC (05-21-10) Texas School Board Rewrites History Textbooks With A C...

The Texas Textbook Wars | by Jeff Riggenbach

Texas and Textbooks

Alief ISD Uses Technology To Make It Easier To Get Answers | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

Alief ISD Uses Technology To Make It Easier To Get Answers | News 92 FM | Official Site for Houston News, Traffic, Weather, Breaking News

La candidata demócrata a la gubernatura de Texas, lanza libro autobiográfico 'Forgetting to Be Afraid' en donde habla muchas cosas íntimas como mujer, como hija, madres y sus dos abortos que tuvo que realizar por razones médicas y humanas

Tx Freedom Network @TFN Sep 4 ALERT: Testify at hearing on social studies textbooks - Sept. 16.

http://tfn.org/LetsMakeHistory pic.twitter.com/wCy9AcYZ5l

The Case for Vaccinating Your Kids, in One Alarming Chart Eileen Shim's avatar image By Eileen Shim 7 hours ago

The Case for Vaccinating Your Kids, in One Alarming Chart Eileen Shim's avatar image By Eileen Shim 7 hours ago


Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us Gail Collin...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us Gail Collin...: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2012/jun/21/how-texas-inflicts-bad-textbooks-on-us/

Monday, September 8, 2014

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: (function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElements...

Dalea Lugo Political Blogger :: (function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElements...: Post by PBS .

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: Student Debt (HBO)

In School Finance Battle, Legal Fees Accumulate

In School Finance Battle, Legal Fees Accumulate

If the Texas school districts that are challenging the constitutionality of the state’s school finance system ultimately prevail in their lawsuit, a result could be billions of dollars in extra funding from the state’s coffers for public education.

And more than $8.5 million would also go from the state to the four teams of lawyers representing them. Late last month, state district Judge John Dietz of Austin ruled in the districts’ favor, saying the Texas school finance system leaves school districts without the resources to meet the state’s academic standards. Among the evidence he cited in his findings was the “dismal” performance of poor and English language-learning students in Texas compared with their peers; the 100,000 students not on track to graduate high school on time and the high remediation rates of students who go on to college. The state plans to appeal the ruling.

Dietz also ordered the state to pay for the plaintiffs’ legal tab, which has surpassed $8 million, along with additional costs as the case goes through the appeals process.

The award came over protests from the state, which raised a number of objections, including paying for travel costs for lawyers and witnesses coming to Austin from across Texas. The trial, which lasted a total of 55 days and involved more than 90 witnesses, ended in early spring.

But Dietz said it was “equitable and just” to award the fees, which did not include time spent by the districts’ legal teams on public relations or legislative matters unrelated to the litigation. Dietz said that travel expenses were not excessive.

“The litigation involves districts from across the state with different interests and perspectives. It is entirely predictable and necessary that plaintiffs’ counsel would be drawn from across the state,” he said in his ruling.

The total cost to the state in the litigation — which followed lawmakers cutting almost $5.4 billion from public education in 2011 — is unclear. The sum that Dietz awarded comes on top of the state’s own expenses in defending the lawsuit, which a spokeswoman for the Texas attorney general’s office said the state had not calculated.

But if the state ends up paying the districts’ legal fees, that money would probably go back into the districts’ local budgets. Though arrangements vary among the four groups of districts that are parties in the lawsuit, their lawyers said they intend to return any money they receive from the state to cover their costs.

“If we ever do recover our fees, we simply refund the districts,” said David Thompson, a Houston attorney representing the largest group of school districts in the case.

When school districts joined Thompson’s lawsuit, which includes about 80 from across the state, he said each agreed to pay a dollar per student, with a cap at $65,000, annually for two years.

School districts that joined a separate coalition in the lawsuit, led by the Equity Center, a research and advocacy group that represents low-property-wealth schools, were also asked to contribute a dollar per student.

But that included the caveat “that any amount, including zero dollars, would be acceptable if that’s what a district needed to do,” said Wayne Pierce, the director of the Equity Center. That initial collection was enough to cover the first round of the trial that began in October 2012, Pierce said, but not the second session that Dietz called after the 2013 legislative session.

At that point, Pierce said, the group asked districts to make a second contribution of 50 cents per student. Now, he said, the group should have enough to cover the expected appeal.

Disclosure: J. David Thompson is a partner in Thompson & Horton, which is a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune. The Equity Center was a corporate sponsor of The Tribune in 2010. A complete list of Texas Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewed here

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/09/08/school-finance-battle-legal-fees-accumulate/.