From Deseret News archives:
East-side district hits snag
Midvale says no to 4-city school proposal; mayor wants status quo
And the city, with feeder schools and low-income students, is an important piece to a recommended four-city district.
"Never I wouldn't do it in a million years," Midvale Mayor JoAnn Seghini said Wednesday. "Because I know how you run a school district. I did that for 36 years. You've got this cry that the east side doesn't want to build schools on the west side of the valley. They don't know what they're stepping into and how hard it is."
The former Jordan School District assistant superintendent said Midvale wants to stay put. The blue-collar city of 27,000 is currently a part of Jordan School District, the biggest district in the state.
On Tuesday, Mike Bennett of Bennett Educational Consultants Inc. presented results of an information-gathering study to the Cottonwood Heights City Council. The city hired Bennett for $9,500 to determine the best route for Cottonwood Heights to take if small school districts start forming around them.
The roughly 32,000 student district, if it were formed by the four cities, would have an estimated funding projection of nearly $217 million.
"Midvale shares boundaries. Sandy city shares several schools with Midvale and. . . if three cities went Sandy, Draper and Cottonwood Heights went then Midvale's feeder system would be disrupted," Bennett said. "Midvale is left with Hillcrest (High School), with half its population."
Cottonwood Heights officials pitched the four-city idea to Bennett, he said, because they did not want an elitist split by excluding Midvale. "They didn't want to leave out a city that has more than its share of poverty."
Keeping the integrity of those boundaries, Cottonwood Heights Mayor Kelvyn Cullimore said, was the reason he wanted Midvale in on the study.
In addition, cutting Midvale out of the equation means the new district would lose about $3 million in federal funding. Three Midvale schools receive Title I funds. Those funds are allocated by the federal government to school districts with a high percentage of low-income students.
Comments
- Smoking up nationally, down in Utah 5:36 p.m.
- 4A: Springville holds off Dixie 5:28 p.m.
- Lit flicks: Holiday movie offerings 5:17 p.m.
- 1940s thrillers are new to DVD 5:17 p.m.
- Keb' Mo' enjoys independence 5:16 p.m.
- On the screen 5:16 p.m.
- Weekend entertainment calendar 5:16 p.m.
- 'Bruno,' 'Star Trek' new to DVD 5:16 p.m.
- Coming soon to theater near you 5:16 p.m.
- Musician writes first note to last 5:16 p.m.
- House passes health care bill
328 - SLC council OKs gay rights policies
311 - TCU showdown has big implications
195 - Senators want food tax restored
158 - Cougars crush hapless Cowboys
155 - Utah Jazz fall apart against Kings
131 - Will state consider gay rights law?
130 - TCU 4th in AP poll; U. 16th, Y. 22nd
119 - Letters: Strange breed in Utah
117 - Editorial: Mormons and gay rights
112
One of my guilty pleasures is perusing the covers of celebrity magazines...
The galactic center shines like firelight through gaps in …
Yes Rich lost to you with class last year and just as important they repaid...
...........is Greg? We will soon find out...........stay tuned!
Trash talk is part of football. My bet is half of the people on this...
Born and raised in Utah. We OutMigrated 22 years ago for a "Good paying...
I agree, in a true emergency, no one would shop around. But true emergencies...
Max Hall is great and I'm glad he chose BYU. He's a link in a great legacy...
GO flyers you guys did great this year just too bad you guys lost :(
To Earl: Although you and I obviously disagree on this issue, I respect your...
John Wooden was a great coach so was Dean Smith................legends. They...


You can be the first to comment on this story.