Tuesday, July 28, 2020

7-28: OC's irrepressible Board of Ed

Southern California’s hospitalizations, coronavirus spread start to plateau after steady resurgence 

OC Reg

Orange County Board of Education Considers Suing the State Over School Shutdown

Voice of OC

     Members of the Orange County Board of Education are expected to discuss suing the state over the mandatory school shutdown at their meeting this Tuesday night. 
     Earlier this month, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced that any counties on the state coronavirus watch list, which includes Orange County, would not be allowed to have in-person classes

     According to the agenda for the board’s upcoming meeting, members will be discussing potential litigation “regarding state orders and restrictions against reopening schools.” 

. . .

     The county board of education does not have the power to return students to classrooms, and that decision can only be made by the 27 individual school districts. 

     The board came under national scrutiny earlier this month after members approved a report calling for students to return to classes without masks or social distancing. 

     The guidelines also ran in direct opposition to the county’s own department of education, who released suggestions that encouraged the widespread use of masks and social distancing when children returned to school. 

     The report was also disowned by multiple members of the advisory panel that were listed as contributors, who said they never saw what was planned before it was released to the public. Those members included county supervisor Don Wagner and public health care agency director Dr. Clayton Chau. 

     Public comments can be submitted on the issue, but the Board still has not publicly released over 4,000 comments from the meeting where they approved the report, none of which were read ahead of the board’s vote on the issue.

     The board has also limited in person public comment to 30 minutes for their upcoming meeting, with an additional 15 minutes after they meet in closed session.

One question still dogs Trump: Why not try harder to solve the coronavirus crisis? -- Both President Trump’s advisers and operatives laboring to defeat him increasingly agree on one thing: The best way for him to regain his political footing is to wrest control of the novel coronavirus. Ashley Parker and Philip Rucker in the Washington Post$ -- 7/28/20
 

Criticism Mounts Around Police Response at Recent Protests in Orange County

Voice of OC

     An increasing number of protesters in Orange County are voicing concern over police officers’ recent conduct in cities where demonstrations against nationwide police violence have occurred.

     Most recently, a protest in Anaheim against more federal agents dispatched to demonstrations in Portland, Oregon, was interrupted July 25 when a police car struck someone during the march and was filmed driving away…. 

 

Oakland mayor, Black Lives Matter allies warn that vandalism plays into Trump’s hands -- The latest peaceful protest to morph into late-night acts of vandalism in Oakland has unleashed a furious response, but this time the torrent of blame didn’t come from President Donald Trump. Angela Ruggiero in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 7/28/20

 

UCSD, USD Investigating Social Media Accounts Posting Hate Speech -- UC San Diego on Monday denounced an Instagram account claiming an affiliation with the university that posted "hateful, racist content" on its page, while a similar investigation was underway at the University of San Diego. KPBS -- 7/28/20

 

Senate Republicans Propose $29 Billion for Higher Ed

Inside Higher Ed

     Senate Republicans in their opening bid for negotiations with Democrats over the next coronavirus aid package proposed giving colleges and universities an additional $29 billion in aid, which is a figure American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten called “woefully inadequate.”….

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...