77°F
weather icon Windy

Mitchell loses Title 1 status, but not services

A change in the way Clark County School District distributes its money intended to aid low-income students will not result in any losses of support staff or student services at Mitchell Elementary School, which will not be considered a Title 1 school for the 2019-20 year.

“Losing our Title I status ultimately means we’ll be losing about $38,000 in federal funding that we’ve received over each of the last two school years,” said Principal Ben Day.

In the past, the district disbursed its Title 1 funds to schools where at least 40 percent of students are eligible for free and reduced-price lunch. Now it is only allocating that money to schools where at least 60 percent of students are eligible.

Title 1 funds are provided by the federal government to elementary, middle and high schools to help ensure that all children meet state academic standards. Mitchell was first designated Title 1 for the 2017-2018 school year.

“This past year, we used that $38,000 to purchase a software program that provides extra support to students in reading, and additionally, we have used the money to pay certified temporary tutors to provide intensive reading intervention to students who aren’t meeting grade-level benchmarks in reading,” Day said.

“The good news is that we’ve done a good job with managing our general budget that we receive from the state every year, so our plan is to continue using the software program and the tutors, but we’ll have to pay for those things from our general budget instead of from Title I funds.”

Losing its Title 1 status also will reduce how much some of the school staff is paid, according to Day.

“Instructional aides who work at Title I schools generally get paid more than aides who work at non-Title schools, so many of our aides will receive lower pay due to this change,” he said.

“Because we have outstanding instructional assistants and want to keep them all here at Mitchell, I have offered to give each of them an extra hour of work per day next year so that they won’t lose annual pay due to a status change that is out of their control. Fortunately, we have managed our general budget in a responsible way, so we will be able to afford to do that.”

Overall the school district received roughly $95 million in Title I funding for high-poverty schools this year, sending $64 million directly to 279 schools — including district-sponsored charter schools. The district anticipates giving $67 million to schools in 2019-20.

Las Vegas Review Journal reporter Amelia Pak-Harvey contributed to this story.

Contact reporter Celia Shortt Goodyear at cgoodyear@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow her on Twitter @csgoodyear.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Leash law gets another look

One of the most discussed topics in Boulder City this past year has surrounded when, where and if dogs can be off-leash.

New faces at BCPD

Monday morning, three new Boulder City police officers were sworn in during a ceremony that featured city staff, family and fellow officers. Above, Chief Tim Shea swears in, from left, Rayman Bateman, Zach Martin and Hi’ilani Waiwaiole. Shea noted that it’s very rare for them to swear in more than one new officer at a time. Two more future officers will be attending the police academy next month. The new officers help fill vacancies left by retiring officers or those who have moved onto other agencies. Left, Mayor Joe Hardy gave the three new officers an impromptu group hug during the ceremony.

The Mouse, his House and me

I’m about to say something that divides many in terms of their opinion. More than should a sandwich be cut horizontally or the diagonal cross-cut. Even more than the question of Coke vs. Pepsi and even more controversial than whether a tomato is a fruit or vegetable.

Eagles keep up their winning ways on volleyball court

Boulder City High School boys volleyball continues to succeed against higher classes of opponents, knocking off 4A Somerset Sky Pointe 3-2 on April 8.

Late-inning effort lifts Lady Eagles

A young team that is showing progression, Boulder City High School softball showed resiliency this past week, capping off a come-from-behind victory over rival Virgin Valley on April 9, while defeating 4A Silverado on April 8.

‘Honestly, I just thought about football’

Torryn Pinkard doesn’t want to be looked upon as someone with cancer who happens to play football. He’d rather be seen as a football player who happens to have cancer.

Boys volleyball wins first league game

Boulder City High School started league play with a victory, defeating The Meadows 3-0 on April 1.

From Garden to Grave

Last week, the Christian Center Church hosted four showings of Garden to Grave: Live Stations of the Cross. Pastor Deborah Downs said the Stations of the Cross “are a contemplative practice of walking the way of suffering with Jesus. If one were to visit the city of Jerusalem, they would discover all 14 stations on what is called the Via Dolorosa – The Sorrowful Way – a path from Pilate’s court to Golgotha to the tomb.”