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Wells Fargo Bank Donates to FGUS

The Foundation for Glendora Unified Schools was one of five local nonprofits to receive a check from Wells Fargo Bank in celebration of their new location in Glendora. Board members Mike Beckman, Gene Murabito and Jeanne Beckman were in attendance at the grand opening of the new branch to accept the check which will be used to enhance education for students of the Glendora Unified School District.

Pictured (left to right): Wells Fargo representatives Nicha Tabrizi, Socorro Arrieta, Glendora Mayor Ken Herman, Foundation President Mike Beckman, Foundation board members Gene Murabito, Jeanne Beckman, and Wells Fargo representative Gilbert Medina.

Pictured (left to right): Wells Fargo representatives Nicha Tabrizi, Socorro Arrieta, Glendora Mayor Ken Herman, Foundation President Mike Beckman, Foundation board members Gene Murabito, Jeanne Beckman, and Wells Fargo representative Gilbert Medina.

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Thank You to Our Business Donors

The Foundation for Glendora Unified Schools would like to thank the following businesses for their support of our recent fundraising event, Food for Thought.

This event, which supports the students of the Glendora Unified School District,
was a success due in large part to the generosity of our community businesses.
Please thank them through your patronage, and let them know you appreciate their support of your children’s education!

A special thank you to:
95.5 KLOS
A1 Rents
Armstrong Nursery
Bone Yard FX
Classic Coffee
Clubhouse 66
Divine Nails Spa
Fairplex
Fiorina
f’REAL! Foods
Frisella’s Roastery
Hill Top Real Estate
The Irish Gardener
Janell Thurston & Tracie Fiore, Mane Street Salon
Jan’s Towing
Judith Ripka Jewelry
Kumon Math & Reading Center
Laissez-Moi Designs
Luca Bella Fine Foods
Mylien’s Vietnamese Cafe
NVme Fashions
Outdoor Elegance
The Parlour Wine Bar and Bistro
Petrillo’s
Plaza Produce
Raging Waters
Rainbow Gardens Nursery
Referral Only Limousine
Sena Zimmer Photography
Sylvan Learning Center
SWIRE
Taco Grill
Traci Morrow Fitness
Universal Studios
Village Eatery
Village Goldsmith

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GUSD Superintendent Winter ‘10 Letter

GLENDORA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
500 North Loraine Avenue, Glendora, CA. 91741
(626) 963-1611 • Fax (626) 335-2196 • Web Site www.glendora.k12.ca.us

   February 2010

BOARD OF EDUCATION
Denice K. Delgado, President
Douglas R. Ferrell, P.E, Vice President
Doris Blum, Clerk
Charles J. Gomer, Ph.D., Member
Mike Gautreau, Member


Catherine J. Nichols, Ed.D.
Superintendent

Dear Parents and Guardians:

The Governor released his proposals for the 2010-11 State Budget in January. California continues to grapple with deficits that have been identified at approximately $20 billion. This is a huge deficit that the Governor is attempting to mitigate. In his “State of the State” presentation, the Governor stated that he protected funding to education. In reality, significant ongoing cuts to public education in the amount of approximately $225 per average daily attendance (ADA) have been proposed. The cost of living adjustment (COLA) has not been provided to the school district for several years.

This is a staggering hit to our budget in GUSD.

Challenges faced by GUSD prior to the Governor’s proposals:

Prior to the Governor’s proposals in January, GUSD needed to make $2.5 million in cuts for
2010-11. The District presented the following information to the Board of Education and the public in the fall of 2009:

  • The state cuts to the budget have required GUSD to cut approximately $7 million over the last two years. We have worked diligently to preserve the integrity of the District while making extremely difficult decisions.
  • The state made additional cuts to school funding in July. The one-time federal stimulus dollars were used to bring back the teachers who received Reduction in Force (RIF) notices and the federal stimulus money is now gone.
  • The District is considering furlough days as a method for reducing employee layoffs and to maintain as many programs and services possible. Furlough days are a negotiable item between the District and employee associations. Administrators will take the furlough days in the same manner as all employees. The state is currently permitting school districts in the state to reduce the school year by 5 days.
  • The District Budget Committee began meeting in January. The recommendations of the District Budget Committee will be presented to the Board of Education in February.

The ultimate effect:

In the fall, GUSD needed to make approximately $2.5 million in cuts for 2010-11.

Due to the Governor’s proposals in January, GUSD must make additional reductions to the projected budget by more than $1.5 million. The net effect is GUSD must now make significantly more cuts totaling approximately $4 million for 2010-11 that will stay in effect through 2011-12. Much of the revenue generated through the District of Choice Program has been used to maintain lower class sizes, to offset the loss of revenue associated with the reduction to the COLA and to mitigate the decline in enrollment.

What does this mean to our students?

  • The District is currently proposing seven furlough days with employee groups and administrators.
  • The current school year may be reduced by up to four days.
  • The 2010-11 and 2011-12 school years may be reduced up to five days.
  • There will possibly be teachers who receive Reduction in Force letters (RIF).
  • Class size may increase.
  • Some programs will be reduced or suspended until funding is restored.
  • There will be reductions and suspended hiring of administrators, certificated employees and classified employees.

The Governor’s budget proposal is the starting point for negotiations at the state level and we anticipate that changes to his January proposal will be made prior to the final budget being adopted. However, as always, public education must make adjustments at the local level based upon the Governor’s budget proposals.

These cuts are the greatest challenges GUSD has ever faced. We have worked together to maintain the integrity of the District during these devastating times for education. GUSD is not alone; school districts throughout the state are attempting to grapple with the same issues. School districts in the state are reducing the school year and taking salary reductions to protect employees and programs.

These are very difficult times but let us work to keep the focus on the students while we, as adults, grapple with possible solutions that will keep our school district intact over the next few years until funding is restored. Parents are encouraged to give generously to the Foundation for Glendora Unified Schools (www.fgus.net). The Foundation has helped the District maintain lower class sizes and ensure valuable programs are provided to our students.

Sincerely,

Catherine J. Nichols, Ed.D.
Superintendent
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SOS Campaign Kicks Off

Dear Families of the Glendora Unified School District:

Thanks to you, we are doing great things! Last year, with your support, we were able to raise $365,000 to help our schools through the Support Our Students (SOS) Campaign. With these funds, we made direct and significant contributions at every school in the district:

• Continued instrumental and voice instruction in the 4th grade.
• Restored ½ teaching position to maintain class size at elementary level.
• Restored 1 teacher position shared at the middle schools for electives and college preparatory classes.
• Restored 1 Math and 1 English teacher at Glendora High School to maintain class size.
• Restored the on-site school resource officer who services all schools.

Your commitment and generosity made it possible to provide a better education for our students.

It’s no secret the State’s economic challenges are still affecting Glendora’s schools and our students. The GUSD budget has been drastically cut, and next year’s budget will again be reduced an additional $4.5 million. However, we, as a community, can do something about it. Through your donations to the SOS campaign, we are empowered to make a positive impact on our children’s education and maintain the educational excellence for which Glendora is known.

Our goal this year is to surpass our 2009 fundraising level. Please give to the SOS campaign, which kicks off in February. We invite you to explore our website, www.fgus.net, for information on what we’re doing, what’s happening in education at the state level, a message from our district, and how you can become involved to make a difference.

Your support of education here in Glendora is very important. With your tax-deductible donation, you show our students their education is a priority in this community. Please make your donation today and display your SOS yard sign in May to show your support of Glendora’s students.

You can make your tax-deductible donation by:

• Completing the enclosed envelope and sending it via mail or to your child’s school.
• Using PayPal on fgus.net.
• Becoming a member of Circle of Giving, a convenient monthly deduction plan available on fgus.net.

Together, we will continue to do great things!

Sincerely,

Mike Beckman
President, Foundation for Glendora Unified Schools

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Superintendent’s Corner: Fulfilling Our Promises

By Catherine Nichols
Superintendent of Glendora Unified School District

There is a sacred trust, a covenant, which local school districts maintain with parents, community members, and business people. Glendora Unified embraces that trust and has fulfilled our part of the covenant.

Glendora Unified School District is committed to preparing our students to meet the future with confidence.

The goal of education is to tap into the talents of each student and create an environment where they flourish, individually and collectively. Student academic success is part of the covenant we embrace.

During the last 5 years, the District increased its API test score 65 points; rising steadily from 786 to 851. All Schools in the District have an API over 800 and several have scored over 900.

The path to the future appears bright as we connect our students to their passions, providing multidimensional learning that is personalized.

Student success in academics, the arts, music and athletics are the focus of Glendora Unified. Glendora High School was among the top 5 percent of high schools in the nation named by Newsweek Magazine in both 2008 and 2009.

Success builds upon success and the positive results of hard work by teachers, administrators and support staff is apparent.

Of the nine comprehensive schools in Glendora Unified, six schools have become California Distinguished Schools and one school has been named a Title I Achieving School over the past five years.

California Business for Education Excellence and Just for the Kids named five schools in Glendora Unified for outstanding success in raising student academic achievement!

The Foundation for Glendora Unified Schools has donated more than $700,000 to the district over the past two years.

Glendora Unified School District has worked to preserve and nurture the dreams and aspirations of our students.

Until now, although battered by devastating cuts to education, Glendora Unified has persevered with a focus on our priorities: increased student achievement, closing the achievement gap and creating a 4-year college culture.

But California schools are at risk. There is only a very thin veneer that is keeping GUSD - and most school districts in the state - on track.

Each student, whether they are in the first grade or eleventh grade, has only one year to learn that particular curriculum, and we cannot let them down.

Through this devastating fiscal crisis, the worst since the Great Depression, we have feverishly sought to maintain programs, services and support to our students.

School districts statewide have cut funds for textbooks, reduced personnel, depleted reserves and closed schools.

Now the Governor has proposed additional cuts to education. My district of 7,000 students has 10 million dollars less this year, a 20 percent reduction in funds, to educate our students.

We have pulled the “infrastructure” of our school district apart to keep cuts as far away as possible from our precious students.

We have fulfilled our part of this covenant. We have tenaciously maintained high expectations for our students to close the achievement gap, increase student achievement and create a 4-year college culture, but we are on the precipice.

Education must once again become a priority for our state, not in lip service, but in resources. It is a shame and shameful that students in California receive less money per child than students in Mississippi or Alabama or Tennessee.

Do we want our students to have the same opportunities as students in New York or New Jersey? Will our students need to compete with these students? You bet they will. We must have the will and courage to regain the stature that California once enjoyed and more importantly provide necessary resources to our children.

A well-educated work force is critical to the economic success of our state and nation.

The degree of interdependence that exists because of the global economy, the technology that links people throughout the world and the outsourcing that is occurring to India and China should serve as a wake up call.

In order to maintain a competitive advantage, to maintain a high quality of life, we must reinvest in our schools.

Boldly and unequivocally I assert we, in Glendora Unified and in school districts throughout the state, have fulfilled our part of this sacred covenant.

The state has not done the same. We are feverishly trying to protect our students. We, the adults in this state, are responsible for, and contributors to, the continued neglect of the schools.

We also have the power, if we have the will and resolve, to demand school funding be restored to levels that students in California experienced when the state was truly golden and not tarnished.

Source: San Gabriel Valley Tribune

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Food for Thought

April 30, 2010
6:00 pmto10:00 pm


Please select number of attendees on next screen

UNDERWRITER OPPORTUNITY:

  • FRONT ROW TABLE FOR TEN
  • AWARD-WINNING FAIRPLEX WINES PERSONALLY SELECTED FOR YOUR TABLE
  • PROGRAM RECOGNITION
  • RESERVED CURBSIDE PARKING

$2,000 PER TABLE

To reserve your table, please contact us at FoodForThought@fgus.net.
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