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CHULA VISTA (KGTV) -- Facing a nearly million budget shortfall, the superintendent of Sweetwater Union High School District revealed a proposal Friday to issue more than 230 layoff notices to teachers and staff and eliminate a program that helps struggling students graduate.According to agenda documents posted Friday afternoon, Dr. Karen Janney will ask the Board of Trustees to eliminate 237 positions, including 182 teachers and all 23 librarians.Sweetwater’s financial woes came to light in 2018 after the district miscalculated its budget by million.RELATED: Sweetwater Union High School District approves interim budget with million shortfall“To see financial ineptitude affect people’s lives this way, it’s devastating,” said Sweetwater Education Association Vice President Cesar Fernandez. “It’s a kick in the gut. It takes the air out of you.”Layoff notices are essentially a formal warning about a potential job loss. Sweetwater spokesman Manuel Rubio said the district was working hard to minimize the number of actual layoffs.“There are significant costs and significant challenges that districts are facing,” he said. “That has nothing to do with how our finances are managed, it’s how we’re funded.”“We’ve lost a lot of students in the last few years, and we’re not alone,” he added.RELATED: County Office of Education offers M loan to Sweetwater DistrictDistrict enrollment has dropped by about 1,700 students over the last five years, he said. Since the district gets roughly ,000 in funding for each student, the enrollment decline shrunk revenue by about million, according to Rubio.Special education and pension costs are also up significantly, he said. The district’s pension contribution roughly doubled from million in 2015-16 to million in 2018-19, Rubio said.The layoffs include 32 teachers attached to the district’s alternative education learning centers. The superintendent’s plan would close all 12 learning centers by July 2020.RELATED: Report: Sweetwater Union High School District incorrectly reported debt"They're targeting some of our most vulnerable students and that's not acceptable," said SEA president Julie Walker.The centers are designed to help struggling students graduate. About 1,300 students are currently in the program.According to Fernandez, the district projects the move will save about million. The SEA contests the figure, saying the changes could lead to further declines in enrollment.RELATED: Parents blast district’s plan to cut school bus routesTeachers say the centers often serve students with special needs, teen parents, homeless students, and learners with mental health concerns who require a non-traditional school day.“We understand these are the most needy of students,” said Rubio said. “We’re going to streamline the way we offer services to them.”He said the students would be transitioned into an independent study model, and many of the existing learning center teachers would be attached to the new program.RELATED: Sweetwater District approves recovery plan to balance budgetTeachers, however, said the new model might further disconnect the struggling students from campus life.“Being at a learning center on a school site, it allows them to participate in sports and clubs; things that connect them to school, things that keep them in school,” said Fernandez.“I would not be surprised if the dropout rate in our district rises as a result of this,” added longtime teacher and librarian Ana Banos. 3513
CHULA VISTA, Calif. (KGTV) — Chula Vista Police showed off a new drone on Tuesday called the Skydio 2.The drone is designed to be easy to pilot, using cameras and sensors on all sides to detect objects before crashing into them.It also has the ability to track a person on auto-pilot.CVPD is the first law enforcement agency in the world to obtain the new drone.It joins their fleet of several other drones that have already been used in 1144 incidents and have led to 158 arrests. 489
CHULA VISTA (KGTV) -- In an email sent late Friday night to the Chula Vista Elementary School District families, Superintendent Francisco Escobedo announced his plan to start reopening his South Bay campuses by late October.Escobedo's proposal calls for phased expansion to "live in-person instruction" starting with preschool through second grade, and Special Day Class students (Mild/Moderate and Moderate/Severe special education students). The first phase is slated to start Oct. 26, and will open classrooms on a modified day schedule Monday through Thursday. His letter did not include a date for students in grades three through six.Escobedo said the district will follow a hybrid instruction model allowing families the option to continue distance learning.In his letter, he acknowledges the South Bay's high rate of COVID-19 cases in certain zip codes but says campuses are the safest places for students citing "extensive protocols and requirements necessary for in-person instruction to take place.""I have heard from many of you about the enormous challenge, frustrations even, of balancing work and life without the safety and security provided by our local schools," said Escobedo."In fact, several public school districts in San Diego County have already opened their campuses to at least small groups of students, including special education students, English learners, and others who need additional help or receive specialized instruction."Coincidentally, four students have tested positive for COVID-19 in the Del Mar Union School District and had to return to online distance learning for two weeks after students tested positive for COVID-19 last week. Two students tested positive for the virus at Sage Canyon School, one student tested positive at Sycamore Ridge School, and another student tested positive at Torrey Hills School.WATCH REPORT: Four positive COVID-19 cases confirmed at DMUSDIt's unclear what procedures CVESD campuses will follow if a student or teacher contracts the virus.According to the district's Frequently Asked Questions page on its website, the goal is to keep class sizes at 16 except for classrooms with small dimensions.Face coverings are required for the older students, while second graders and below are expected to wear one.Escobedo's announcement comes days since the Sweetwater Union High School District informed families it would continue distance learning through December 2020, citing "significantly higher" COVID-19 cases within the district's communities.Official data reports Chula Vista's case rate is 2,142.1 per 100,000 population, making it the third-highest in San Diego County. Spring Valley has the highest case rates with over 5,000 per 100K, followed by National City with 2,550 per 100K."It is with this information, and with our continued commitment to the safety of our students, families, and staff, that we announce the continuation of distance learning for the remainder of the semester through December 2020," SUHSD said in an email sent to families on Monday.READ THE LETTER FROM ESCOBEDO TO FAMILIES BELOW:Dear Parents/Guardians:As we continue teaching and learning in this most unusual of years, I want to take a moment to thank our staff members and community partners who recently opened most of our schools to “cohorts,” or small groups of students, through the Distance Learning Support Program (DLSP). Participants include special education students, English learners, and children of essential workers. The program is operated in partnership with the YMCA of San Diego County. Already, more than 1,100 students are participating in DLSP at 41 of our 46 schools. In a traditional school year, this program might otherwise be considered a before- or after-school program. Now, during this pandemic year, DLSP operates during the school day to provide care and support with distance learning for our students who most need the program.With the success experienced with DLSP, the Chula Vista Elementary School District is proposing an expansion to live in-person instruction when supported by local data. Ideally, we would start offering in-person instruction at the beginning of the second quarter of our academic year, which is Monday, October 26. We propose a phased expansion, starting with students in Preschool through Grade 2, as well as Special Day Class students (Mild/Moderate and Moderate/Severe special education students). I have heard from many of you about the enormous challenge, frustrations even, of balancing work and life without the safety and security provided by our local schools. Given the extensive protocols and requirements necessary for in-person instruction to take place, there is little doubt that schools are one of the safest places for students. In fact, several public school districts in San Diego County have already opened their campuses to at least small groups of students, including special education students, English learners, and others who need additional help or receive specialized instruction. More school districts will be opening in the weeks ahead in our region and across the country.Because COVID-19 transmission rates have been higher in certain of our local zip codes than the rest of San Diego County, our District is taking a measured and cautious approach toward a return to on-site classes. With our proposed expansion to in-person instruction, students would attend school four days a week (M-Th), possibly on a modified day schedule. Our goal is 16 students per cohort for most classes, but no more than 18, in Transitional Kindergarten-Grade 2 in order to maintain social distancing. Preschool students would remain at no more than 14 students in a classroom with no more than two adults present. Students would have Fridays reserved for distance learning from home. More details can be found here. The proposed reopening will be the focus of our next District Town Hall virtual meeting, scheduled for 6 p.m. on Thursday, October 8. Please save the date and join us!It is important to understand that parents can choose to keep their students in the current distance learning instructional model—even when/if schools are reopened for in-person instruction. A commitment form will be sent to all District parents by school principals to determine which parents want their child/children to return to in-person instruction or remain in distance learning.With the safety of students and staff foremost in our decision-making, our District will continue to work with local public health officials and the County Office of Education to ensure a reopening that is consistent with federal, state and local guidelines. We also continue to dialogue with our labor groups about how to return safely because of our increasing concern for students’ social-emotional well-being, physical safety, and widening academic inequities.I appreciate your flexibility and understanding as we adjust to ever-changing conditions.Sincerely,Francisco Escobedo, Ed.D.Superintendent 7013
CHULA VISTA, Calif. (KGTV) -- With the Oscars just around the corner, residents at St. Paul's Plaza in Chula Vista were treated to a special workout class.The class featured dances and moves choreographed to Oscar-nominated songs.Residents of the community smiled and laughed as they moved along to the beats.Watch the video in the player below: 353
CHULA VISTA (CNS) - Two San Diego County congressmen called on United Technologies Corp. Monday to reconsider plans to lay off roughly 300 employees at the company's Chula Vista manufacturing plant as it looks toward shuttering the facility entirely.Reps. Juan Vargas, D-Chula Vista, and Scott Peters, D-San Diego, joined California Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris to push back against the layoffs. Vargas and Peters also requested that the company answer a list of questions about how UTC decided to shutter the plant and how involved the machinists union was in the discussion.UTC notified workers in July of the company's plan to close the factory by 2020."We understand that complex domestic and international markets factor into these difficult decisions; however, we note that UTC's company website says it creates products for one of the ‘fastest growing industries on the planet,"' Vargas and Peters said in a letter to UTC Aerospace Systems President David Gitlin. "This robust characterization of the industry seems to conflict with the decision to eliminate hundreds of production jobs."UTC's plant in Chula Vista has operated since 1940 and produces engine pods and mounts for aerospace companies like Boeing and Airbus. The union representing the workers charges UTC with moving its manufacturing plants to Mexico to take advantage of cheaper wages."We hope UTC reconsiders its decision to shut down its manufacturing facility in Chula Vista," said Robert Martinez Jr., president of the International Association of Machinists. "Generations of IAM members have made this facility successful. The work being done at UTC's facility in Mexico is work that should be done in Chula Vista. We applaud Sens. Feinstein, Harris, and Congressmen Vargas and Peters for standing up for good jobs here at home." 1833