RAYTOWN'S LEADING NEWS SOURCE
To leave a comment use this link POST A COMMENT
Paul’s Rant
There seemed to be some confusion with the football schedules in
Raytown last week. Someone scheduled
both Raytown and Raytown South games at home.
There was a problem, however. Raytown only has one football field. That meant there were two games played on the same field on the same night. What a horrible situation! How inconvenient for all involved.
There was a problem, however. Raytown only has one football field. That meant there were two games played on the same field on the same night. What a horrible situation! How inconvenient for all involved.
Never fear. The School District
has solved the problem. They will spend
2.9 million dollars and put in a football field at Raytown South. We all know the boys will be smarter after
they play on their own field. Perhaps it
will raise the sagging test scores.
You see, in the Raytown Quality Schools, the overall test scores went
from 119 points out of 140 (85%) last year to 100.5 out of 140 (71.8%) this
year. Don’t believe me? Check out the annual report released by the
Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.
From where I’m sitting, almost $3,000,000 will buy a lot of books and hire a lot of remedial teachers. Starting salaries in Raytown schools for new teachers with no experience is about $35,000 a year.
If the School District bought 1,000 books at $30 a pop and hired teachers for each elementary school, they would spend somewhere in the neighborhood of $775,000 per year. The money wasted on a football field would fund teachers and books to raise the test scores for almost four years.
From where I’m sitting, almost $3,000,000 will buy a lot of books and hire a lot of remedial teachers. Starting salaries in Raytown schools for new teachers with no experience is about $35,000 a year.
If the School District bought 1,000 books at $30 a pop and hired teachers for each elementary school, they would spend somewhere in the neighborhood of $775,000 per year. The money wasted on a football field would fund teachers and books to raise the test scores for almost four years.
Greg’s Rant
TO THE READERS: Paul had much to say this week about the path chosen by
the Raytown School District. Thought I would add my two cents worth.
There has been much hand-wringing and blame-placing in attempts to
explain away why test scores of Raytown School District children have joined
the lower echelon of area Kansas City School Districts. This latest move by the School District is not
because of a lack of money. It is because of a lack of leadership.
Children don’t go to school to play sports. They go to school to learn. That’s why sports are called extra-curricular
activities. Someone has their priorities in the wrong order.
Who scheduled two high school football games at the same stadium on one
night? If that is the problem, find the idiot and discipline him or her. Do not
throw away 2.9 million dollars on a new football stadium less than two miles
from one already available and pretend a problem has been solved.
High school sports are important for developing character and the value
of teamwork to students. However, the adults in the room have a responsibility
to keep focused on the real purpose of high school . . . to prepare our young
to take the next step in joining and becoming productive members of society.
From this writer's point of view, there is another purpose to the building of the stadium. As Mike Wallace of 60 Minutes fame once said, "if it looks like a duck, it quacks like duck, and it walks like a duck, it probably is a duck".
Sad to say, but this 2.7 million dollar boondoggle looks more like resume' building than any real concern for the district or its patrons.
From this writer's point of view, there is another purpose to the building of the stadium. As Mike Wallace of 60 Minutes fame once said, "if it looks like a duck, it quacks like duck, and it walks like a duck, it probably is a duck".
Sad to say, but this 2.7 million dollar boondoggle looks more like resume' building than any real concern for the district or its patrons.
Ignoring the greater goal of our schools and throwing money around
recklessly is a step down a very slippery slope. What is worse, it gives a very
bad example for our young to follow.
The School District should reverse this nonsensical decision to waste
2.9 million dollars of the taxpayer’s money.
Charter Commission News
The Raytown Charter Commission took historic steps at its last meeting
when it set the number of signatures required to implement Initiative,
Referendum and Recall petitions by the voting public.
For those unfamiliar with the terms, here is a brief description of Raytown is a Fourth Class city. Fourth Class cities are prohibited by
state law to allow registered voters backed petitions to force ballot questions
on the ballot. As a Charter City, voters would be allowed to bring questions
directly to the ballot without City Council approval.
Just as important as the right to bring petitions for Initiative,
Referendum and Recall is the amount of signatures needed to make them
effective.
Originally the Commission considered thresholds of signed petitions at
fairly high numbers. But after lengthy debate, Commissioners agreed on what
most consider reasonable numbers for petition gatherers to gather to make ballot
drives effective.
INITIATIVE PETITIONS . . . would require 8% of current registered
voters to bring an issue directly from the voters to the ballot box.
REFERENDUM PETITIONS . . . would require 8% of current registered
voters to bring a question requiring a vote of the people on an action taken by
the City Council to the ballot box.
RECALL PETITIONS . . . would
require 17.5% of the current registered votes to bring a question requiring a
vote of the people on the removal of an elected city official from office.
The benchmark was set higher for elected officials because Raytown’s
city wards are so small an 8% threshold would be so ridiculously low that less
than 250 voters could bring a recall vote to the ballot.
Charter Commissioners Mark Moore and Greg Walters and Jason Greene were
the driving force behind the move to lower the numbers to “reachable” levels.
RAYTOWN REPORT CHOICES
Constitutional Amendments 2, 3, 6 and 10
ON TUESDAY VOTERS WILL BE ASKED TO DECIDE THE FATE OF FIVE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. HERE ARE OUR CHOICES ON THE AMENDMENTS. PLEASE NOTE THAT ON AMENDMENT 4 PAUL AND GREG HAVE SPLIT THEIR ENDORSEMENT.
ON TUESDAY VOTERS WILL BE ASKED TO DECIDE THE FATE OF FIVE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. HERE ARE OUR CHOICES ON THE AMENDMENTS. PLEASE NOTE THAT ON AMENDMENT 4 PAUL AND GREG HAVE SPLIT THEIR ENDORSEMENT.
Constitutional Amendment # 2 will
allow relevant evidence of prior criminal acts to be admissible in prosecutions
for crimes of a sexual nature involving a victim less than eighteen years of
age. If a person has a history of
abusing or molesting young people, the judge and jury should know this when
making their decision.
VOTE YES . . . ON AMENDMENT NO. 2
Constitutional Amendment # 3 will force school districts to evaluate teachers by a standards based performance evaluation system for which each local school district must receive state approval to continue receiving state and local funding. It will also force the school districts to dismiss, retain, demote, or promote teachers using the student performance data as part of the evaluation system. This proposal does not account for the children who will enter the school district from other, unaccredited school districts. The scores are the scores and the teachers will be evaluated on that alone. It will also force teachers to teach only those subjects on the tests. If there are no questions requiring the use of long division, would teachers really risk teaching it? Probably not. They will concentrate on those subjects they know will improve their evaluations.
VOTE NO . . . ON AMENDMENT 3
Constitutional Amendment # 6 will permit voting in person or by mail for
a period of six business days prior to and including the Wednesday before the
Election Day in general elections, but only if the legislature and the governor
appropriate and disburse funds to pay for the increased costs of such
voting? What are all the things wrong
with this proposal? Let me count
them. 1) Early voting will only happen
if the funds are appropriated and disbursed.
This should not be at the whim of the legislature or the governor or
anyone else. Either it will happen or
it won’t. Our ability to vote or not
vote early is not a game. 2) We can
already vote early. It’s called absentee
voting. I did it myself once. I was scheduled to be out of town on a
business trip, so I voted early. My
neighbor is 95 years old and can’t always get out if the weather is bad. The Election Board mails her ballot to
her. She fills it out and sends it
back. State governmental officials
estimate start-up costs of about $2 million and costs to reimburse local
election authorities of at least $100,000 per election. That’s a lot of money to spend to reinvent the
wheel.
PAUL'S RECOMMENDATION . . . VOTE NO
PAUL'S RECOMMENDATION . . . VOTE NO
GREG'S RECOMMENDATION . . . VOTE YES
Paul makes some valid arguments in his view of the amendment. However, I
would remeind readers that any pre-voting plan would have start-up costs. Paul
may not agree with how the plan is structured, but I see it as a step in the
right direction. I especially appreciate that the Legislature has had the
foresight to not get carried away with the early voting scheme. Some states
allow pre-voting up to a month before the election. Most contests, particularly
local races, are not completely developed until late in the campaign. Voting
one month early does not allow voters to become fully informed about the
issues.
Constitutional Amendment # 10 will require the governor to pay the public debt, and it will prohibit the governor from relying on revenue from legislation not yet passed when proposing a budget. To restrict the governor from proposing a budget with only revenue approved by the legislature severely infringes on the checks and balances the Founding Fathers set up.
VOTE NO . . . ON AMENDMENT 10
FIT BOTTOMED EATS
Baking Gluten-Free Bread
That Really Is Delicious
Like I briefly mentioned in another post, years ago Ryan got into baking
bread. And I mean, into it. I got him a copy of this book as a gift for
Christmas, and he started making bread pretty much on the daily. And it was
awesome. For all family events or gathering, there would be […] READ
MORE
To leave a comment use this link POST A COMMENT
To leave a comment use this link POST A COMMENT 




Comments
I feel that the taxpayers should be responsible for funding only the subjects required to receive a HS diploma. Sports and most other electives such as band, orchestra, and chorus are not required for a diploma and should be discontinued unless the student pays to fund these activities. Offer them as an option at a price.
When I lived in Raytown I was in contact with Dr. Markley and a board member. One of them claimed that sports were NECESSARY to the education process. I don't understand why?
I suggest that when school taxes come onto the ballot, that each property owner look at his/her tax bill before voting and also when board members come onto the ballot, check their spending (waste) record.
Andy Whiteman
I am sorry I though that school was to prepare our youth for the future but I guess there is not much of a future to prepare them for anymore.
Yes another boondoggle! Does this new one also include $2M for AstroTurf?
Andy Whiteman
Yep! It fits!
And all the uniforms were at the parents cost.
Students could not be in extra curricular activities if their grade level dropped; it really made a difference in just sliding by on their grades.
Sports participation is not required for a diploma but don't point your finger at the students who participate for lower test scores. Study after study shows that students who participate in activities such as sports, band, debate, etc., score better on tests and have better GPAs than non-participating students. These students have to maintain eligibility and take lessons of discipline, achievement and time management into the classroom. On top of that, these students are subject to random drug testing and the number that have been caught is incredibly small.
It is a very sad commentary on the times we live in.
http://www.viralnova.com/walmart-turned-library/
But that does make an excuse for people who make education of our young their career to take the action they have. Times change, priorities changes. Apparently the priority with the Raytown School District administrators is sports before education.
So very sad.
You've been gone from Raytown a long time. All you did was complain when you were here. Haven't you made any friends down there? Why don't you just impart all your wisdom to them and stop giving us your nonsense?
I have boots that have lasted 20 yrs!
Buy decent made boots and they will!
Only resoled once; but again I didn't wear them daily as part of a work uniform in all types of weather.
Mailmen go thru the same thing as does anyone that has to wear boots/ work shoes as part if a uniform.
My son is in construction and has to buy expensive boots on the top end but over years they pay for themselfs