The longer
days of March are filled with lots of county meetings starting with the regular
board meeting on the first.
Board Chair
Neil Spoonhower, District 2 made a brief state of the county report.
"The
state of our county is strong because we have engaged citizens. We have
hundreds of citizens who volunteer to serve in the county, whether on boards or
committees, or at the animal shelter or picking up trash on the side of the
road, and many more.
"We
have the most engaged voters in the state, year after year, we have the highest
voter turnout. Our county is strong because of our amazing staff. We have the highest
caliber professionals serving their citizens tirelessly around the clock. As
noted by Mr. Alvarez being on the phone with me last night at 12:30.
"Our
county is strong because of our dedicated Constitutional Officers and elected
officials who put our people first and our hearts are dedicated to service.
"We're
strong because of our sound financial practices on the tail end of a global
pandemic.
""We're
looking to lower personal property taxes, making significant investments in
personnel for public safety, education, and staffing to make sure we meet the
demands of our citizens.
"Goochland
is strong, not because it sees itself as a county and a great commonwealth, but
because it sees itself as a community, a community that I am proud to be part
of."
Town Hall
meetings
Spring town
hall sessions are scheduled for Districts 4 and 5 on Thursday, March 10 at
Tuckahoe Pines Retirement Community at 1230 Patterson Ave, (the post office
thinks its in Richmond, but we know it's in Goochland); District 2& 3 on
Tuesday, March 22 at Central High School Cultural and Educational Center on
Dogtown Road; and District 1 on Thursday, March 31 at Byrd Elementary School
2704 Hadensville-Fife Road. All sessions begin at 6:30 p.m. The county budget will be explained and
matters of countywide and district interest will be discussed.
Fees for
brush disposal will be waived at county convenience centers until April 1 to
help residents cleaning up after the January storm.
VDOT
Marshall Winn VDOT Ashland Residency Administrator reported
that the contractor hired to clear storm debris from Goochland roads worked for
nine days before walking off the job. Bids from other companies to do the work
have been reviewed. Winn was optimistic that another firm will undertake this
task soon. He said that this work is different from clearing I64, which is overseen
by the Culpeper and Richmond Districts.
Work on the
Fairground/Sandy Hook Roads roundabout is expected to begin sometime in late
spring. The extension of Fairground Road to Rt. 6 does not have sufficient
funding to proceed at this time.
School
budget
As the
budget for FY23, which begins on July 1, and tax rates for calendar 2022 are
adopted by the board in April, the supervisors hear departmental and agency budget
presentations during March.
School Superintendent
Jeremy Raley Ed.D. presented the budget
for the school division approved by the school board. As approved by the school
board, the amount for FY 23 is $24,500,000. This includes an increase of $1 million
in county transfer from FY 2022. Our schools serve approximately 2,500 students,
a number that has been stable for the past few years. See the document at https://drive.google.com/file/d/14Q6OckSUjv4aW_LKKVPfL4cvmLbo_gh0/view.
Of core services
funded by the county—law enforcement, fire-rescue, and education—education consumes
the largest piece of the pie. Raley began his talk with a brief overview of the
some of the many accomplishments of our schools. According to Niche.com.
Goochland has the best teachers in the Richmond region and Goochland Schools
are rated first in the Richmond region.
"All
decisions are based on the best interests of our students," Raley said, declaring
that the school budget is based on needs, not wants. This includes expanded programs
to mitigate the "summer slide" fall off in reading and math skills,
and most important of all, improved salary and benefits for the teachers and
staff that make the accomplishment of the division possible.
The success
of Goochland schools, contended Raley, is tied directly to the talent of the
people who work in the organization. "We have the best teachers. It is our
goal to make sure that we continue to attract and retain the best so we can be
successful well into the future." He said that the 85 percent vote in
favor of the education bond referendum at last November's election indicates
strong citizen support of the great work that our schools are doing.
Raley's
remarks echoed those made last week by the Sheriff and Fire-Rescue Chief about the
challenge of competing with neighboring jurisdictions, especially those with
deeper pockets than ours, to attract and retain the best employees. While
Goochland provides an excellent work environment, salary plays a big part in
where people choose to work.
Expenditures
in this budget, contended Raley, are dedicated to the recruitment and retention
of employees including a competitive salary and overall compensation package.
He said our school division is comprised of many moving parts. If some of those
parts are not strong, they have a negative impact on the rest of the
organization.
As noted in
last week's workforce report, less than half of county staff lives in
Goochland. Raley reported similar results for our teachers as part of his
report on salary scales as compared to other school divisions in the region. The
data shows that 171 out of Goochland's 272 teachers live outside the county in
areas with higher teacher pay scales. The average distances they travel to
school range from 23 to 31 miles.
If a teacher
drives by four other middle schools, with higher pay scales, to work at GMS, how
can we compete? Raley asked. As inflation rears its ugly head—especially escalating
gas prices—keeping up becomes more difficult.
Touting the
advantages of working in Goochland Schools—small classes; quality of life;
employee friendly practice; teacher autonomy; focus on growth over achievement;
technology and networking resources; and community support—versus practical
considerations of travel time; child care; salary; benefits; and housing prices
puts GCPS in a competitive vice, contended Raley. He said there are more
openings today than there have been since he came to Goochland in 2016.
The schools
are recommending a 6.41 percent year over year salary increase. That would
still place our pay behind our neighbors, but not as much as before. Raley also
recommended increases for substitute teachers and the lower wage earners who
are "the backbone of the school division". This translates into $1.8
million directed at compensation. Salary and benefits account for more than 80
percent of the school budget.
School
funding includes revenues from federal and state sources. (See the budget
summary for details) Federal Covid money from the American Relief Plan will be
used to mitigate pandemic learning loss.
To see all school
budget documents go to https://www.goochlandschools.org/page/budget-and-finance.
2 comments:
Anytime you have to claim strength, that is a sign of weakness.
Need a new speech writer. Sounded like Biden.
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