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Blue Valley High School • W th St • Stilwell Kan • Friday April
Stretching the dollar Board approves cuts to district expenses W
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maneezaiqbal hat does the future hold for Blue Valley? Increased class sizes. Less time for counselors to help kids. The possibility of athletes paying to play a sport. Why? Budget cuts. The Blue Valley Board of Education approved a $ 2 million district-wide budget cut for the next school year at a board meeting March 8. The Board will further discuss budget decisions at a Board meeting t h i s month. S t a t e wide, school districts are forced to make budget cuts because less state funding is available for schools. “The state funding for education is driven by the sales and income tax,” assistant superintendent Dr. Al Hanna said. “Since 9/11 the state economy has worsened. As consumers, we pulled back buying new cars and clothes. Businesses create a tougher job market. As unemployment increased, the state is not able to collect as much income tax.” The school board has already cut $ 7.5
Will student education be compromised?
million from the budget in the last three years. “Teachers usually felt a minor point [with the budget cuts],” Hanna said. “This is the first year teachers will feel the true bite of it.” A big bite was the board’s decision to increase the staff-to-student ratio from 18.0 to 18.5 in the high schools. This decision is expected to save $450,00. However, BV is growing. Next year, about 100 new students are expected to attend, but about two less teachers will be hired. The result: increase in average class size. Teachers will have to teach more students in a class compared to this year. At the other high schools, staffs are being trimmed. “[Students will have] less individual time with the teacher,” counselor Sandy Fryer said. “[Also] the teachers will have to make tougher decisions regarding the class.” The biggest fear: Will student education be compromised? According to the Kansas National Education Association (KNEA), Blue valley students are ranked among the top 10 of all national standards. However, the budget cuts would force the school to cut certain programs and classes. In the last several years enrollment fees and course fees have in-
Photo Illustration by Brandon Lutz
creased. Principal Dennis King said that the teachers would work as hard as they are to continue the quality of education. But the budget cuts could compromise that effort. “No doubt the quality of education will be affected,” Hanna said. “Work days decrease as class size increases. The painful budget cuts will have a huge impact. “ The board also reduced extended days contracts by 25 percent. These teachers will work fewer days, receive less pay while doing the same amount of work. Counselors and department chairs will have less time to work with students and set programs. Counselors usually come in during late summer in order to help students stay on track with four year plans. “The time [lost] is used to work with students and parents,” Fryer said. “[And] it bothers me that we won’t be able to help as many people that we traditionally used to.”
Students frequently come in to the office to find resources and receive help with schedules. However, 25 percent of the counselor’s days will be gone and so will the opportunities to provide help. “We’re so dedicated to our jobs and we hope for a reward or a pat on the back, but instead we get a pay cut,” Fryer said. Another option to ease budget cuts is having athletes pay a fee to play in a sport. However a decision will be made in a board meeting this Monday about that. “The board asked to develop a plan [and is] seriously looking at that [option],” Hanna said.
Drill team returns to world competition staffwriter
michaelacross
Above: The Open Guard waits for the music to begin at the Mid-America Regional Feb. 14, in Tulsa. Left: The A Guard hits their ending pose at the same competition.
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BV organizes blood drive Blue Valley will host its bi-annual blood drive Tuesday, April 13 from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the auxiliary gym. Sign ups were this week and students that are 17 years old and weigh 110 lbs. or more are encouraged to donate. “One donation can save three lives,” blood drive organizer junior Kate Reno said. “The Community Blood Center isn’t getting enough blood and every donation is especially important now.”
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he Drill Team will travel to San Diego, Calif. to compete in the Winterguard World Championships on Tuesday. The competition consists of a prelim, and if either of the teams makes it in the top five of their round, they will move on to the semifinals and compete again in hopes of placing in the top 15 to move on to finals. Last year, the Open Guard made it into the finals and placed fourteenth in the world, and they hope to do the same this year. “I’m excited for the Open Guard to hopefully make it into finals again and for the A Guard to do their best,” junior A Guard captain Larissa Sadler said. Prior to this competition, both teams traveled to regional competitions to better prepare themselves for this world-class competition.
The A Guard competed in Springfield, Mo. March 26 and placed second in the MCCGA championships. They hope that this accomplishment will help them for the world competition. The Open Guard traveled March 26 to Dayton, Ohio, to compete against guards in their own Open class. They placed fifth with a score of 79.8. They are currently ranked twenty-ninth in their class. Both teams are nervous about what the outcome may be. Only 30 teams will compete in semifinals, so this creates a worry for the Open Guard members. “There will be a lot of good competition out there,” senior officer Colleen Borner said. The good competition comes from a mixture of 32 states and four different countries making a total of 454 guard units.
Photographer files suit
Excuses, Excuses
In February, photographer Robert Levin filed a $50 million lawsuit against a waste management company for injuries he suffered while taking a picture from atop a trash truck of Ground Zero in New York. While Levin was taking the picture, the driver, not knowing he was on top, drove away, causing him to fall. Levin claimed this action was “failure to respect (my) rights as a pedestrian.” (Printed with permission from www.newsoftheweird.com)
“I caught the senior flu.” “It was daylight savings time.” “I had to take my dad to the airport.” The attendance office sorted through over 55 pages of absentees, including over 230 seniors, April 5, the Monday after Prom.
Senior Count Down: days