Browse
Search
Agenda - 06-06-2017 - 8-a - Minutes
OrangeCountyNC
>
BOCC Archives
>
Agendas
>
Agendas
>
2017
>
Agenda - 06-06-2017 - Regular Mtg.
>
Agenda - 06-06-2017 - 8-a - Minutes
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/2/2017 8:08:09 AM
Creation date
11/1/2017 10:15:38 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
BOCC
Date
6/6/2017
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
8a
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
78
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
1 BOCC and the CHCCS special district tax, both of which represent the majority of the districts' <br /> 2 operational budget. <br /> 3 Rani Dasi said the District continues to experience changes in student demographics, <br /> 4 with an increase in the number of students with higher resource needs presenting significant <br /> 5 challenges to an increasingly strained budget. She said that in 2008-09, the percentage of <br /> 6 students in CHCCS facing economic insecurity was 23%; and in 2016-17 this percentage has <br /> 7 increased to 29%. She said English as a second language (ESL) students have additional <br /> 8 instructional and other support needs, and ESL students represent 11% of the student <br /> 9 population. <br /> 10 Rani Dasi said the Newcomers Program is a district level program, which supports <br /> 11 students who have gaps in their formal education, and lack the most basic, fundamental <br /> 12 English proficiency. She said 6% of the student population falls into this category. <br /> 13 Rani Dasi said the District has the right administrative leadership, concerned and <br /> 14 committed teachers, and the necessary community support and board commitment. She said <br /> 15 the key goal of CHCCS is to reduce inequity, and this is a long-term goal that will require new <br /> 16 ways of addressing many aspects of the District. She said this includes a longer-term view of <br /> 17 how the District funds and manages. She said CHCCS is asking for a long-term partnership <br /> 18 with the BOCC to achieve the goal of a profound reduction of inequity, and improved outcomes <br /> 19 for all students. She said CHCCS commit to being honest partners, responsible managers of <br /> 20 resources, and to collaboratively work with the stakeholders with transparent communication. <br /> 21 Rani Dasi said CHCCS's budget submission includes additional information to inform <br /> 22 the conversation, including detail on current spending, and primary funding sources for the <br /> 23 District. She said the 2017-18 budget includes four key areas of requests, and nearly half of <br /> 24 the budget request is driven by the local portion of state mandated increases; the second area <br /> 25 is teacher and instructional support; the third area is living wage; and the fourth area is <br /> 26 continuation requests. <br /> 27 Rani Dasi said the CHCCS Board of Education (BOE) approved the District Equity Plan <br /> 28 last week, which has been shared with the BOCC. She said this plan will support closing the <br /> 29 opportunity gap. <br /> 30 Rani Dasi said a significant number of CHCCS buildings are aging, and in disrepair. <br /> 31 She said the asset base is $400 million, and industry standards put the annual investment into <br /> 32 facility maintenance at 5-7% of the asset base. She said current annual appropriations do not <br /> 33 provide this level of funding. She said CHCCS recognizes the funding challenges, and looks <br /> 34 forward to creative partnerships to meet all education needs. <br /> 35 Steve Halkiotis said there continues to be an unfolding destructive path affecting public <br /> 36 schools from Washington, D.C. to Raleigh. He said this is a planned and deliberate attack on <br /> 37 public schools, to bring them to their knees financially and ultimately cut off the knees. <br /> 38 Steve Halkiotis said without the Board of County Commissioners, the Orange County <br /> 39 Schools (OCS)would have folded a long time ago. He said all need to stand up and fight <br /> 40 against this tide in Washington. He said the OCS Board of Education appreciates any and all <br /> 41 help that the BOCC can offer to public schools. <br /> 42 Chair Dorosin said reviewed the agenda for the evening. <br /> 43 <br /> 44 1. Durham Technical Community College— Orange County Campus <br /> 45 • FY 2017-18 Operating Budget Presentation and Discussion <br /> 46 • Capital Investment Plan Discussion (New Health Technology Building) <br /> 47 <br /> 48 Dr. William Ingram, Durham Tech President, thanked the BOCC for its ongoing support <br /> 49 for Durham Tech. He said their budget reflects an increase of $12,823 in operating funds to <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.