Monday, March 26, 2007

Lisa Rickert Seeks Second Term on FBISD Board


New Territory resident Lisa Rickert will seek a second term on the FBISD board May 12 in order to continue working towards goals that will improve the quality of education for students in the district. “I have seen much progress in the past three years within Fort Bend ISD, but there is still much to be done,” said Rickert.
New Territory voters turned out in record numbers in 2003 to help elect Rickert, the first New Territory resident to hold a political office in Fort Bend. Rickert, who served as board president in 2006, has taken a strong stance on issues of fiscal and administrative efficiency, long range planning, and professional leadership. As an at-large representative and a newcomer to the board, she examined existing practices carefully and challenged them when necessary.
“Ms. Rickert began to shake things up for the better. Eventually, a majority of Board members (who also live outside the sacred First Colony/ Commonwealth cloister) have come around to the same viewpoint — FBISD has languished for too long in nostalgia about “the good old days” when Ft. Bend was a sleepy suburban district. Reality has long left that picture in the dust but the District is having to catch up with it. An exploding population is only part of the problem….It’s been a painful change in some respects and the fight to get some change going was not pretty. Those entrenched in the ‘old ways’ fought hard to keep change from coming….” wrote an anonymous blogger in a March 6 post on Fort Bend Now.
Rickert continues to challenge “status quo” thinking but is also pleased to note that the board has worked as a team on important projects such as rezoning and hiring new Superintendent Dr. Timothy Jenney. “Dr. Jenney is a tremendous asset bringing in personnel with higher level management skills and experience that will help increase the overall efficiency of the district on all levels,” she said. Rickert was also instrumental in improving the student-teacher ratio so that there are more teachers in the classroom and smaller average class sizes. She supported internal audits that revealed areas in which the district could improve efficiency of operations.
And perhaps most significantly, Rickert has and will continue to work towards implementing innovative policies and programs to improve academic achievement for all students in the district. “No learning takes place without good teachers. As a board member, I will help ensure we have policies in place that allow us to hire and recruit quality teachers and improve the retention rate of our experienced teachers. I will support programs to encourage our best teachers to seek administrative education, promote from within the organization, and improve employee morale,” she said.
Classroom safety and discipline is another issue that will soon receive the district’s attention as Dr. Jenney’s new Chief Academic Officer John Frossard heads up a commission to recommend new policies. Rickert said she will “look to ensure rules are enforced in a fair and consistent manner with consideration for “common sense”, not zero tolerance.
Rickert aims to continue working on ways to reduce overcrowding in the growing district. She supports ideas that will make efficient use of existing campuses and facilities, as well as the construction of new schools in high-growth areas.
Rickert will be at the NTRCA candidate forum on April 19. The forum is at 7:30 p.m. at the Club.
Rickert and her husband, Bill, have lived in New Territory for 15 years and have daughters attending Sartartia Middle School and Austin High School. She has previously served on the NTRCA board, the MUD 111 board, The Brazos Bend PTO, and has been a Girl Scout leader for nine years.

Monday, March 19, 2007

NEW TERRITORY RESIDENT REACHING OUT TO SOLDIERS


When Mary Scantlin’s neighbor’s 19-year-old son was called to serve in Iraq last year, she was shocked to hear that the U.S. Marines suggested he bring his pillow.
She was struck by the irony of the request—realizing that soldiers are missing basic supplies but also the warmth and comfort of home.
Scantlin, a New Territory resident, was instantly moved to create an outreach Program called “Good News for Soldiers” which consists of sending care packages with personal notes or letters to specific soldiers.
“It’s a little box of love from home. Regardless of the contents, it holds the good news that there are people at home that care about them,” she said of her care packages. Each one includes a note from Scantlin (signed by a “Grandma in Texas”), volunteers, or local children. “The marines wrote me that they are especially touched by the letters they receive from children,” she said. The flat-rate boxes (provided by the Post Office for free) are carefully and efficiently packed with magazines, books, personal hygiene items, cough drops, aspirin, Tylenol, and pocket-sized snack packs. She fits as much into them as possible as the post office charges $8.10 regardless of weight or destination.
One sergeant with a medical police unit out of Boston suggested sending pre-packed backpacks with wash cloths, personal hygiene items, Bibles and other inspiring literature, toothbrushes and toothpaste, pajamas and home-made afghans. One very popular request is for baby wipes in the small, packable packages. Scantlin says she likes to send snack items that the soldiers can carry in their pockets because they sometimes go on 12 hour-long missions .
Although she sends out packages regularly, she hits the holidays hard. Her next mass mailing is scheduled for Easter, a season that “speaks of new life and hope,” she said.
Scantlin sent out 270 packages last year and wants to send out hundreds more this year. She needs volunteers, though. “People in New Territory don’t even know there is an outreach right here,” she said. Scantlin has a room set aside in her Pointe Royale' house for sorting and packaging. Donations of money and supplies are also welcome although she is still waiting for approval of her application for tax-exempt status. The packages cost $8.10 each to mail, and that doesn’t include their contents. And of course, she could use letter-writers too to bring “Good News to Soldiers”!
“Whatever your views on the war, we need to support our military. I am very patriotic,” she said.
To volunteer your time or resources, contact Mary Scantlin at spgndy@yahoo.com and write “GNFS” in the subject line.

Friday, March 2, 2007

NEW TERRITORY ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS REZONING PLAN

BRAZOS BEND AND WALKER STATION REZONING PLAN TO BALANCE STUDENT POPULATION

As expected, FBISD approved a zoning plan for 2007-2008 in their February 26 meeting that includes sending Telfair children to Sartartia Middle School instead of First Colony Middle School and officially shifting four New Territory neighborhoods from Brazos Bend Elementary to Walker Station Elementary. In a surprise move, however, the board also decided to re-zone the Broadstone Apartments on New Territory Blvd. to Walker Station as well. Doing so will likely result in about 100 less students for Brazos Bend next year, said
Associate Superintendent of Facilities and Planning, Lee Petros. Brazos Bend, with a design capacity for 795 students and a functional capacity for 716 students, has about 952 students this year. Walker Station, with a slightly larger design capacity (908), is better equipped to handle the students from the apartments because of its size, lesser students, and “greying” population. Walker Station Principal Chris Morgan said enrollment numbers are projected to decline over the next several years as kids get older and move on to middle and high schools and as fewer families with young children move into the community. “We have fewer and fewer kindergartners each year,” he noted.
Morgan also expressed no concern with the increased numbers for next year. With the rezoning, Walker Station will go from 804 to about 900 students. “We’ll be fine. Our teachers are excellent and will provide the same level as education no matter what. This is not going to change things for us.” He also said he does not think they will need an extra portable as they have one vacant one on site.
Brazos Bend Principal Beverly Croucher expressed the same confidence as Morgan. “We manage very well over here and will continue to do the same for our kids as we’ve always done,” she said. The rezoning will provide some relief, she said, but they will still require portables. There are 8 portables, or 16 classes, on campus now. This is the entire fourth and fifth grades.
The rezoning results in both schools being equally overcrowded so that Brazos Bend is not overly burdened, said Petros. “It just evens the population and makes it more evenly distributed,” he said.

FBISD approves calendar "B" for 2007-2008

The FBISD school board has approved calendar "B" for the 2007-2008 school year, a schedule that includes longer holiday vacations but a June 4 end date. Both calendars considered by the school board and presented to the public for input had an August 27 start-date due to changes in state law which no longer allow districts to start school earlier with an approved waiver. According to FBISD officials, 2545 out of 3011 respondents favored calendar B over calendar A (84.5%) in their website survey. The main differences between the two proposed calendars were that Calendar A showed two days off at Thanksgiving instead of 5, 8 days off at Winter Break instead of 10, a May 28 end-date, and a slightly longer first semester.

District personnel stated that the shortened Thanksgiving break in 2006 resulted in 4083 student absences on Monday, November 20 and 6757 on Tuesday, November 21. The absenteeism on those two days cost the district $164,000. For this reason, the district supported a full week off for Thanksgiving break.

Although many students, parents, and staff members expressed their preference to take semester exams before the Winter Break, the Calendar Committee determined the grading periods would be too unbalanced in that arrangement, district personnel said. Students will have ten days after returning from Winter Break before the first semester ends when they take final exams.

Many parents also suggested through the survey that they would support eliminating Fort Bend County Fair Day, a holiday on the fourth Friday of September. The district said they would consider this for the 2008-2009 calendar.

Another parent proposal was to consider moving Spring Break to another week so that Good Friday stands alone as a holiday. "The proposed schedule for Spring Break is consistent with the time other districts in the area are scheduling Spring Break. It was a coincidence that Good Friday fell during this week for 2008. This will not be a consistent issue, as Good Friday falls on different dates each year," said the district.

Dates for 2007-2008 Calendar

August 27 - school starts
September 3 - Labor Day holiday
September 28 - Fort Bend County Fair Day holiday
November 9 - staff development
November 19 - 13 - Thanksgiving break
December 20 - January 2 - Winter Break
February 29 - staff development
March 17 - 21 - Spring Break
May 2 - staff development
May 26 - Memorial Day holiday
June 5 - last day of school
June 6, 7 - graduation