Hallsville ISD elementary school raises more than $5,000 for Angel Tree | News

Hallsville ISD elementary school raises more than ,000 for Angel Tree | News

HALLSVILLE — A Hallsville ISD elementary school has raised more than $5,000 this year to contribute to the district’s Angel Tree fund, which provides Christmas presents for families in need.

Each November, Hallsville Intermediate School raises money throughout a two-week period known as the “Penny Wars,” to donate to the Angel Tree Foundation, which provides Christmas presents to area children in need.

The friendly competition sees jugs for teachers set out front of the school’s front office during the two-week period. The teachers who collect the most points from pennies wins.

“Here’s how the game works: each family of teachers has their own plastic jug outside of the front office. Students gain points for the class by adding pennies to their jug. Students can lower their opponents’ points by adding silver change to the opponents’ jug,” Hallsville Intermediate School Counselor Victoria Downs said. “The points are tallied each day and announced over the intercom. The next morning, the students are ready to sabotage whoever is winning and also add more to their own jug.”

In addition to knowing they bested other classes at the game, the winning team at each grade level wins a pizza.

“We also set a campus goal to raise $3,000, and if we reached that goal, the students would be able to pie our principal, Aaron Hoecherl, and our campus officer, Justin Clark, in the face,” Downs said.

The students raised so much, more than $5,300, resulting in both Hoecherl and Clark getting a face full of pie this year.

“This competition is such a fun way to raise money towards a good cause while also integrating math,” Downs said. “The Penny Wars has always been very successful, but this year we were shocked at how well it went.”

Downs and other staff presented the $5,327 check to Hallsville ISD Special Programs Director Amy Whittle recently.

“We sent emails thanking parents for letting their children raid their couch cushions and cup holders, but parents were calling the school and letting us know that their children were using their own allowance for this fundraiser,” Downs said. “I hope our students know how much of an impact they have made on children’s lives and how many children will actually be able to enjoy Christmas this year because of them.”

In celebration of the above and beyond giving, the winning classes received their pizza and the whole school received popsicles and extra recess time, making a win-win for everyone this holiday season.

OFCC approves $15 million for new Massillon elementary schools

OFCC approves  million for new Massillon elementary schools
OFCC approves  million for new Massillon elementary schools

MASSILLON – The Ohio Facilities Construction Commission is expected to contribute $15 million to help Massillon City Schools construct two new elementary schools.

The OFCC meet last week and approved the state’s share of $15,219,211 for the project, Superintendent Paul Salvino said. The state Controlling Board is expected to approve the release of the funds next month.

The agreement with the OFCC is the result of many back and forth meetings with the commission.

More:Massillon poised to build 2 elementary schools without new tax dollars

More:Massillon BOE moving ahead with plans for future of district facilities

For some time, district officials have been working with the OFCC to secure funding to build new schools to replace the district’s aging elementary schools.

Hawley Elementary School teacher grateful to be alive after tragic field trip accident

Hawley Elementary School teacher grateful to be alive after tragic field trip accident

FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – Gooseberry Falls is a popular Minnesota state park. But it’s also dangerous. A quick google search brings up article after article of hikers falling to their death.

Beau Lofgren is one of those people who fell off over the waters edge while trying to save a child– and today he lives to tell the tale.

Six months ago while on a school field trip — the Hawley Elementary teacher’s life changed forever.

“The next thing I knew is we, we both made a 30 foot ball down the set of waterfalls,” Lofgren said.

He broke 4 vertebrae and his tailbone, while trying to help a young student who had waded to close to the edge. Lofgren spent 4 days in the hospital, months in a brace, and even longer relearning how to walk. He still isn’t 100{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}. The physical part of recovery was hard. But, he says, being back at school has helped him recover, mentally.

”It was like instant adrenaline knowing that okay, these are the kids I get to work with. And that really helped me here to get better here so I could be here today,” he told his students before dismissing them for lunch.

Lofgren teaches his 6th graders all kinds of serious life lessons, from student’s losing their little brothers– to his accident.

He stands at the front of the room, brace in hand, showing it off to his students, “And this was my brace honest and my brace that I thought you know, and it’s so funny because this was such a part of my life for you know, three months.”

He says his students are like medicine him– and says that talking to his students is not only helping him recover, but it’s helping his students be vulnerable about their struggles, too.

The accident has given him a new outlook on life. This Thanksgiving, he says he’s more grateful than ever.

“And I’m just thankful to to experience all that life has to offer everyday living and Hawley. I just I can’t say that enough,” Lofgren said.

But most of all, he’s just glad he’s still here for his family.

“I’m thankful for the opportunities I have to teach, to coach, to be a husband, to be a father,” he explained.

And they’re grateful he’s still here, too.

“I love when he drives us to school in the morning — spending that time before school. Coming home after school just seeing him really makes me happy,” his son, Jonathan said.

Lofgren wanted to made sure I told you just how thankful he is for his church, the medical staff at his hospital, and everyone who’s played a part in his recovery.

Copyright 2021 KVLY. All rights reserved.

Metro Schools board approves three charter schools requests to keep fifth-graders in elementary school

Metro Schools board approves three charter schools requests to keep fifth-graders in elementary school
Metro Schools board approves three charter schools requests to keep fifth-graders in elementary school

An effort on Tuesday to add fifth grade at three charter schools, in alignment with Metro Nashville Public Schools’ own initiative, devolved into chaos and a heated debate about the role of school board members.

Metro Nashville school board members eventually voted to allow three charter schools — Rocketship Nashville Northeast, Purpose Prep Academy and Smithson Craighead Academy — to add fifth grade to their current K-4 elementary schools in alignment with the district’s own initiative to move fifth grade from middle schools back to the elementary level.

But the vote came only after heated debate as board members drew pro- and anti-charter lines and a yelling match with some of the many parents who showed up in support of the charter schools.

An initial motion by board member John Little, a charter school advocate, failed and he slammed his colleagues for not supporting the desires of parents. His colleague, board member Sharon Gentry, called his remarks a “tongue lashing.”

Opioid treatment clinic near Sonora Elementary School causes concern among staff | News

Opioid treatment clinic near Sonora Elementary School causes concern among staff | News

A new Sonora clinic offering medication, therapy and treatment for those dealing with opioid addiction is slated to open in March on Pauline Court — a stone’s throw from Sonora Elementary School. 

The treatment center is a welcome presence to some, but a concern for others in the community. 

“I see it as a benefit to the community,” said Dr. Eric Sergienko, health officer for Tuolumne and Mariposa counties. “We have people in our community who are addicted to opioids. What we know is it is a facility to help people maintain sobriety, to keep people off drugs.”

It would be run by a company called Pinnacle Treatment Centers, which acquired another California-based company called Aegis Treatment Centers early last year to allow for the expansion of the business to the West Coast, according to the Pinnacle’s website.

Aegis, founded in 1982, is billed as a leading provider of outpatient opioid treatment programs, offering counseling and medication-assisted treatment (MAT). There are currently 35 facilities throughout California, including locations in Ceres, Lodi, Fresno, Manteca, Merced, Modesto, Stockton and Tracy. 

Treatment at the area clinics can include residential/inpatient rehabilitation; intensive outpatient program; partial hospitalization; recovery houses; counseling; group therapy; medically assisted detox; methadone; suboxone and vivitrol, according to Pinnacle.

Sergienko understands the concerns of those who oppose the treatment center’s location, but he wants the public to know that it is less of a “methadone clinic” and more like a “medical office.”

“People won’t randomly be dropping in,” he said. “Patients will have to make an appointment. There will be a concierge to monitor the situation.

“People who want to get off drugs, stay off drugs, go to these clinics. I don’t see the clinic increasing crime in the area. It’s not like what you see on TV.”

Tami Beall, superintendent of Sonora Elementary School District, said she’s supportive of having an opioid treatment center, just not in the location on Pauline Court near the school.

“I think parents will be outraged. We have students who are 4 years old,” she said. “The clinic’s location is less than 50 feet from the school.”

Officials at the City of Sonora’s Community Development Department could not be reached on Thursday for questions about permitting and zoning of the center. A representative for Pinnacle Treatment Centers also could not be reached.

The biggest concern for Beall is the way she found out about the treatment center.

“How come we heard about this second hand?” she asked. “School Counselor Emily Vieira talked to me about it, after a doctor brought this to her attention. Why wasn’t I contacted directly?”

According to Beall, a Zoom meeting took place earlier in the week between eight of the treatment center’s representatives, as well as one doctor, Tuolumne County Superintendent of Schools Cathy Parker and Sergienko to address the concerns over the clinic’s location. 

“They (Pinnacle/Aegis representatives) have no concerns about being close to a school,” Beall said. “None.”

School representatives asked the company during the Zoom meeting to buy them a $4,500 camera to monitor the situation once the treatment center opens in March, since they don’t have a camera in that area, according to Beall.

“I was told our clients are confidential. They said they can’t,” she explained. “We want to angle the camera at our students, not at their clients.”

Though the camera was not an option, Beall said the company did offer the elementary school a concierge service — basically a “security guard” — to watch over the clinic, which will be open 7 days a week, from 6 a.m. to 10 or 11 a.m., she said. 

Beall and the other representatives attending the Zoom call happily accepted the offer of a monitor, she said.

The property on Pauline Court is currently being remodeled, Beall said. 

Clients will have to have a referral from the county Public Health Department, according to Beall, who was told that the program would start small with just 20 people. 

Her concern is that the number of patients seems low and that the company may be trying to “soften the blow.” 

Beall’s fear is that the patient numbers will get much higher. One concierge to monitor the clinic’s clients, as well as her students, doesn’t seem like enough security, she said.

The company agreed to hold a virtual town hall meeting at 6 p.m. Nov. 30 via Zoom. Concerned parents are asked to submit their questions for the medical company prior to Nov. 29 (see info box for details).

“This (the treatment center) is definitely a need for our community,” Beall said. “They just need to put it some place else.”

Town hall meeting information:

Pinnacle/Aegis Virtual Town Hall Meeting via ZoomTuesday, Nov 30, 2021at 6 p.m.

Meeting ID: 860 8313 7170

Submit questions for the meeting by Nov. 29 to: Cassandra Keuning, [email protected] or call 209-532-5491, ext. 4085.

County holds off on acquisition of McDowell Elementary School property

County holds off on acquisition of McDowell Elementary School property