20 results for “school leadership”
20 results for “school leadership”
The Santa Clara County Board of Education held Regular Meeting #2468 on July 16, 2025, with six board members present and one absent. Key updates included completion of summer school programs at community schools featuring credit recovery and partnerships with organizations like A Brighter Day and Rebekah Children's Center, as well as announcements of new leadership positions including Interim Principal Maria Yakoub and Director Eugene Santillan. The board approved multiple consent action items including recognition resolutions for National Immunization Awareness Month, Americans with Disabilities Act anniversary, American Muslim Appreciation and Awareness Month, and Disability Pride Month, along with acceptance of donations to the office.
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The Palmerton Area School District Board of School Directors met on March 18, 2025, with President Earl Paules presiding over eight directors present. The meeting included recognition of elementary students for leadership skills in the Leader in Me program and reports on various junior high and high school student activities, including academic competitions, STEM challenges, music performances, and enrichment programs such as the Scholastic Scrimmage Academic Bowl and manufacturing video project. Executive sessions were held on March 4 and March 18 to discuss personnel matters.
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The Transit Authority of the City of Omaha Board held a regular meeting on August 26, 2021, where leadership reported strong performance in the K-12 summer transit program with approximately 11,000 rides compared to 6,900 in 2019, and addressed capacity challenges at peak times near Central High School. The Authority announced that its first electric buses would arrive in the second half of December 2021, with Metro preparing charging infrastructure, training materials, and promotional bus wraps for the new technology. The meeting also included approval of previous meeting minutes and updates on ongoing service initiatives.
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The Huntsville City Council held a regular meeting on February 28, 2013, featuring mayoral recognitions of local achievers including the Randolph School Boys Cross Country Team as state champions and Coach Lennie Acuff of UA Huntsville. The council adopted seven resolutions honoring pioneering African American leaders during Black History Month, recognizing individuals who achieved historic firsts in education, government, and judiciary, including Dr. Ann Roy Moore (first African American superintendent of Huntsville City Schools), Dr. George W. Grayson (first African American elected to Alabama House from Huntsville District 19), and Judge Martha Lynn Sherrod (first African American elected to a county-wide seat in Madison County).
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The City of Fresno City Council held a regular session on Thursday, December 8, 2016, at 9:00 A.M. in the Council Chambers with seven councilmembers present (Councilmember Brand absent at roll call but joined at 9:09 A.M.). The Council approved the agenda as amended after removing two items: General Administration item 2-D (File ID 16-1368) and a 10:30 A.M. Scheduled Matter (File ID 16-1468), both to be heard in 2017, with the latter rescheduled for February 2, 2017. The minutes from December 1, 2016 were approved 5–2. Councilmember Quintero announced District Five's coat drive ending December 22, 2016, and Councilmember Soria announced the launch of the District One Young Councilmember Program, which enrolled ten high school students from Fresno, Bullard, and Central High Schools to build future leadership.
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Jersey City's 2025 Municipal User Friendly Budget document presents the city's tax structure and financial overview, with a total estimated tax levy of approximately $1.097 billion based on a total taxable valuation of $47.014 billion as of October 1, 2024. The budget breaks down tax allocations across municipal purposes (36.34% of total levy), regional school district (43.33%), county purposes (17.85%), and other services including library, open space, and arts and culture programs. The average residential taxpayer impact is projected at $10,760.83, with the municipal purpose tax rate at 0.811 and the regional school district tax rate at 0.968, under the leadership of Mayor Steven M. Fulop and Chief Financial Officer John Mercer.
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The Tallahassee Collegiate Academy Governing Board held a meeting on Monday, August 18, 2025, called to order by Board Chair Karen Moore at 6:00 p.m., with four trustees present (Randall Pople, Kim Kelling, James Taylor) and one absent (David Clark). The Board welcomed new leadership including Principal Dr. Robin Oliveri (with background in STEM education at Leon County Schools), Assistant Principal Sherrhonda Faison (22 years in education), and Dean of Students LaNandra Watkins (18 years in education). The Academy marked year three of operations and its second consecutive year as an "A" school designation by Florida Department of Education for the 2024–2025 school year. A separate agenda for September 15, 2025, at 6:00 p.m. at TSC Fine & Performing Arts Center listed upcoming items including budget updates by Dr. Barbara Wills, a security update by Chief Sean McGovern, and consideration of a Mental Health Allocational Plan.
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This document records a May 15, 2017 meeting of AHEDD in Jenkintown, PA, attended by Michele Boardman, Jerome Greene, Bonnye Kelman, Mary Berry-Shields, and Bill Beck (via phone). The group approved by-laws and discussed recruitment initiatives including sharing CAC information with OVR service providers, promoting through social media, and connecting with the Pennsylvania Youth Leadership Committee. They also addressed completing a past video project by contacting David Mann for transcript support and having Bonnye Kelman coordinate with high school contacts for closed captioning, plus establishing Google Docs folders for document storage. The next meeting is scheduled for September 25, 2017 at 1875 New Hope Street in Norristown, PA from 6:00–7:30 p.m., with plans to invite Bucks County CIL.
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Beach Municipal FCU, a credit union founded in 1970 to serve Virginia Beach city and school employees, released its 2024 Annual Report highlighting its commitment to the credit union philosophy of "people helping people." The organization, which operates two branch locations and is federally insured by the NCUA, continues to expand its digital services and maintains its core mission of understanding and meeting member financial needs while supporting the community. The credit union's leadership includes Chairman Nianza Wallace and a board of seven directors committed to providing financial resources and tools to help members achieve long-term financial success.
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The City of Richmond, Virginia FY2027 Department Budget Submission Workbook documents agency-level revenue and expenditure estimates submitted by city departments, boards, commissions, and the School Board prior to the January 15 deadline, in compliance with Ordinance 2025-100. The workbook presents preliminary departmental budget requests reflecting personnel, operating, and programmatic resource needs to support transparency in budget formulation and decision-making by city leadership. The document includes multiple disclaimers noting that FY2026 adopted budget figures reflect only those amounts as of July 1, 2025, FY2025 actuals remain unaudited, and personnel data, personnel requests, and operating expenditure estimates are subject to revision as recruitment activity, healthcare rates, benefit costs, and other factors are finalized throughout the budget development process.
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