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Jeffco

Campaign email raises questions among Jefferson County school administrators

“There is always a problem when public resources are used to influence an election. Whether the Supreme Court was right or not, it really opened the blue print for school districts to spend money on elections. We really need the legislature to step up and fix this.” Luis Toro, executive director of Colorado Ethics Watch.

New Jeffco Superintendent fringe benefits send salary near $400,000 per year

“Does Dr. Glass understand that charter schools are bound by federal and state public school laws? Does he know that charter schools are not allowed to discriminate in their enrollment policies and that they adhere to the same testing standards as district-run schools? Does he realize that charter schools accept students with disabilities and/or special needs?” — Kim Gilmartin, Jeffco parent.

Jeffco negotiators cook up better teachers union contract

Many have worried that heated JeffCo union negotiations would boil over and burn down the proverbial house. Instead, district and union “chefs” worked together to cook up a much leaner and more appetizing dish.

Jeffco recallers start robocalls

Moving so quickly into the campaign expense of issuing robocalls dovetails with the notion that the recall effort needs to submit their petitions quickly.

JeffCo schools not as transparent with open records as law requires

Open records requests to the Jefferson County School district have been met with obfuscating “interpretations,” time delays that appear to be outside of the legal limits allowed by the law, and with potentially illegal hourly charges for legal review of the documents requested.

School districts across state finding ways to skirt the intent of Proposition 104

Steve Zansberg, attorney and president of the Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition, says the law is ambiguous and subject to an interpretation that prohibits these types of meetings.

“Prop 104 defines a local public body as any group that meets with representatives of the teachers union to discuss labor contract, regardless of how small a group attend the meeting,” Zansberg said. “Under (this) interpretation, there can be no meeting of two members of the school board or its administration with union representatives that is not conducted in the open.”

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