EVERY STUDENT PREPARED

April 29, 2015

We invite all of the candidates for office to send us their thoughts and hope that our readers will share their thoughts with the candidates through the blog.

This from Dori Fenenbock:

EVERY STUDENT PREPARED for El Paso Speak Blog by Dori Fenenbock, April 26th 2015

EPISD could be on the cusp of an educational renaissance with new direction and new leadership. El Paso is experiencing a rebirth of optimism and opportunity. Our schools must not lag behind. We need leaders with energy and enthusiasm who will inspire change. Every student deserves to have the choice and ability to go to college, and will, if EPISD graduates every student prepared.

There are three priorities for EPISD: 1) Let Teachers Teach- attract, support, and retain great teachers, reduce testing, and allow our teachers creativity and time with our children; 2) Put the Money in the Classroom- the magic happens there and we need to maximize our resources where they have the greatest impact: teachers, programs and technology; 3) Trust and Transparency- engage all stakeholders and clearly communicate decisions.

Great teachers are one of our best assets in the education of our children. Studies show that a child’s exposure to just one great teacher results in higher college graduation, higher earnings, and less dependence on public assistance. They are valued partners and need to be a part of decisions we make for and by the district, particularly those we expect them to implement.

We need to downsize central office. We have budget shortfalls due to declining populations and aging facilities that need attention. Fewer students should lead to a reduction in non-essential staff. Our district should lead by example, cut overhead first, and find the most economical option for relocating our central office.

There are out-of-the-box solutions for our facilities. The Mesita / Vilas recommendation is a good example. City and county partnerships are other options to share operational costs and combine services such as schools, health clinics and immigration services. This could lessen the financial burden of underutilized schools important to local communities such as Zavala.

Our biggest challenge in EPISD is a legacy of distrust from the Garcia era. There has been a substantial lack of communication. We need specific and measurable goals for our district, a benchmark for our superintendent’s progress, and a process to clearly communicate this to our stakeholders.

Shifting the narrative about EPISD from negative to positive will take time. There is a small window when the public will give the elected Board of Trustees the benefit of the doubt that they are listening and committed to change. We must capture the momentum to regain public trust and pride in our schools, and build opportunities for our children.

[Dori Fenenbock is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Tulsa Law School. She are her husband, Mark, have four children, all of whom attended EPISD.

Dori served as a legal intern for the United States Court of Appeals and the Oklahoma Court of Appeals. Beginning in 1994, she started a business serving the packaging needs to nationwide clients including Dial, Einstein Bagels, and the U.S. Postal Service. For the last several years, she has stayed at home to raise her children.

Dori serves on the Coronado PTSA, the EPISD Master Facility Planning Committee, the Camino Real Regional Mobility Authority, as President of the Jewish Federation of El Paso and is the past President of the El Paso Jewish Academy. She is involved with Leadership El Paso, the Junior League and the Boy Scouts of America.]

 


Firefighter’s on the ballot

April 28, 2015

Allow me to offer my opinion about the firefighter pay issue on the ballot.  I know that many of you will disagree with part or all of what I think about this so feel free to post comments.

Firstly I think that our public employees should belong to the same retirement system that  civilian citizens do.  While it would be unfair to change the rules for existing employees, we should see to it that new employees are not part of a private retirement plan.  Eventually as the retirees die off we will not need one.

There was a time when public employees received better retirement packages than the general population.  The rational was that the public employees were paid less while they were actively working and thus deserved better retirement benefits.  Many people chose this life style–less money today, more tomorrow.

Now many government jobs pay more than their private counterparts and the government employee gets a better retirement.

I would prefer that we pay our employees a fair wage while they are working.  How can the fair amount be determined?  We start with pay rates at the levels they are at now and we don’t change them until we need to.   As time goes by we will see that if we don’t have enough qualified applicants or if we cannot retain employees then we will need to raise compensation.

As far as the current pay raise issue is concerned, my view is that we will need to raise the firefighter’s pay eventually.  I would rather do it now and put budget pressure on city council so that they will not fritter the money away.

We deserve better

Brutus

 


Please vote

April 27, 2015

Today is the first day of early voting.  I plan to do it today.  I hope you will too.

Many people feel that voting is futile–that they will be out voted.

When citizens don’t vote the incumbents feel that they are free to do whatever they want, after all the citizens don’t care enough to have their voices heard.  If more of us voted our elected officials would be more mindful of how the public feels and thus less harm would be done.

Whether you vote the way I will or you vote differently, the simple act of voting puts our elected officials on notice that they are being watched.

Please vote–else we won’t deserve better.

Brutus

 


Telling it like it is

April 26, 2015

According to some that I have spoken with the editor of the Times was just too liberal for the people of Fort Collins which is where he was editor before coming back to El Paso.

One rumor is that the readers put pressure on the newspaper to have him removed.

Looking into that I found the following at 5280 [The Denver Magazine]

“Robert Moore, editor of the Fort Collins Coloradoan, told a gathering yesterday that the newspaper industry is struggling and may never bounce back, adding that the situation is a “threat” to democracy because government will be less accountable without good watchdogs.”

He was certainly right.

Looking further I found these statements  from our editor at mediamatters.org :

“It’s interesting to note that Colorado Media Matters holds others to standards that it will not apply to itself. It undermines your watchdog role when you disregard standards you proclaim to uphold…”

“The refusal of a watchdog to hold itself to the same standard it applies to others is another matter.”

Then at the close of his note he wrote this:

“I believe that the media needs to be accountable. But to cherry pick tidbits that support a hypothesis while simply ignoring all other information to the contrary isn’t good journalism and it’s not good journalistic criticism.”

Evidently at one time our editor knew right from wrong.

We deserve better

Brutus


Service not among the city’s goals

April 25, 2015

When they decided to destroy our old city hall one of the departments that had to move was the tax department.

The city decided to relocate them to a downtown bank building.  After a while the employees complained about the parking situation and as we wrote in Another inconvenience the city required their landlord to provide parking for the city employees in the adjacent parking tower.

That resulted in the parking tower having less places for taxpaying citizens to use when they needed to go to the tax office.

Yikes!

I went downtown the other day and tried to park in the bank building’s parking tower.  The sign at the entrance declared that there was only one rate to be applied whether you parked for a few minutes or all day.  The rate?  Twenty-five dollars!

The situation made me wonder how treating taxpayers this way could be consistent with the city’s published goals.  Poor against the standard was one of several posts where we listed the city’s goals.

As it turns out the city does not have a stated goal to provide service to the citizens.

We deserve better

Brutus