Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Schools Plan Spells Trouble in Beverly Hills | NBC Los Angeles


Schools Plan Spells Trouble in Beverly Hills | NBC Los Angeles



Schools Plan Spells Trouble in Beverly Hills



A contentious proposal goes before the Beverly Hills School Board next month.
Just how contentious?
Police will be on hand when the board votes. If heightened security doesn't do enough to illustrate the furor surrounding the plan, consider the name calling.
"I’ve been called 'Hitler,'" board member Brian Goldberg told the New York Times. "I just want the noise to lessen."

The noise is being generated by a plan that would eliminate hundreds of slots at Beverly Hills schools reserved for non-residents.
As things stand, the board allows some residents of nearby communities to attend Beverly Hills schools on a permit basis. That could change for some of those non-resident students if the proposal is approved.
"I am incredibly compassionate and sympathetic for what is going on here," Jake Manaster, a board member, told the New York Times. "It was very generous of Beverly Hills to take 20 percent of students from the outside."
That was back when school funding tied to enrollment worked in the district's favor. More students meant more state aid.
The state's budget crisis changed things. According to the Times article:

Essentially, because the city is collecting more in property taxes designated for education than it would receive from the state for its schools, the city is required to use its tax dollars directly to finance