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Thursday January 8, 2009
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Daily Digest

Yuck!
There's a winter storm warning in effect until 7 a.m. on Thursday with another 1 to 3 inches of snow expected. Could be another messy commute.
Duff'em If You've Got'em
North Adams Regional Hospital went smoke-free Monday — so did all its sister sites, from Sweet Brook to Northern Berkshire Family Practice to the Women's Exchange. No ashtrays, no smoking: No butts about it.

Wanted: Eagle Eyes
MassWildlife's annual eagle count runs Dec. 31 to Jan. 14. Anyone sighting one of the regal birds in Massachusetts is asked to participate.

Send date, time, location and town of eagle sightings, number of birds, whether juvenile or adult and observer's contact information to Mass.wildlife@state.ma.us.
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Obituaries


India, Presidential Cat, Dies at 18
Marjorie E. McLain, 80
Barbara Mahon, 81
Kevin B. Finnerty, 71
Joseph L. Crowley, 82
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Region

Pownal Gets Affordable Housing Grant
Brace of Storms Boost Ski Areas
Bennington Firm Lays Off 28
Hairpin Turn Could Be One of a Thousand 'Great Places'
Houses of Faith in Need of Repair
Turkey Hits Bus
No Free Oil 4 Joe
Vt. Road Aid Frozen

Songs From St. James (Vt.)

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Digital TV Subsidy Program Running Out of Money
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Mars Rovers Mark 5 Years
Spirit
and Opportunity have been trekking the red planet for half a decade. Spirit hit the 5-year mark on Sunday; Opportunity will on Jan. 24.

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Patrick Unveils Education Reorganization Plan

Staff reports - January 10, 2008

Dana Mohler-Faria, the governor's education adviser
BOSTON – The head of the Department of Education would become a cabinet-level position under a reorganization plan unveiled today by Gov. Deval Patrick.

Patrick's preference for a secretary of education - a position twice eliminated over the past few decades - has long been known. Dana Mohler-Faria, president of Bridgewater State College and Patrick's education adviser, has been considered the favorite for the job.

The education reform act, filed in the Legislature today under Article 87 of the state Constitution, would reorganize the education system by bringing three education boards covering early education through higher education under the control of an education secretary. The secretary would have a voting seat andapproval over each board's commissioners, budgets and capital plans and have a voting seat on the University of Massachusetts board of trustees.

"There is no greater gateway to opportunity and success than a first-rate education. This reorganization, along with the work of the Readiness Project will guide us through the next phase of education reform to ensure all of our children are ready to compete in the global economy," said Patrick in a statement. "A cabinet-level secretary of education will help us move forward."

Patrick was expected to provide details of the plan this morning at a breakfast meeting with business and civic leaders the Omni Parker House in Boston, according to The Boston Globe.

The governor set up two task forces, one for higher education and the other for Grades K-12, in March to make recommendations on education reform. Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts President Mary K. Grant was appointed to the higher education panel.

The reorganization has to be voted up or down within 60 days; lawmakers are reportedly onboard with the plans.

The task forces and the Legislature have been working closely together, state Rep. Patricia Haddad, chairman of the Joint Education Committee, told The Globe on Wednesday. "I see the coordination from birth right on up as a plus of this new system."

Patrick the reform would better coordinate education policy and create a seamless transition for students across the state's education system.

House Speaker Salvatore Dimasi agreed. "I am hopeful that the creation of an education secretary will help better coordinate our efforts to promote greater educational achievement in the commonwealth and encourage more cohesion and increased accountability in the system."

The reform won't affect hiring of a new state education commissioner to replace David P. Driscoll, who retired last August. The Board of Education finished interviewing three finalists this week and is expected to make a decision next week.

Education Reform Plan:

Creates Executive Office of Education supervising three boards:
  • Early Education and Care (existing)
  • Elementary and Secondary Education (new name for the existing Department of Education)
  • Higher Education (new department that will include personnel now staffing the Board of Higher Education)
Establishes a secretary of education with:
  • Approval authority over the boards' hiring of each of the three commissioners
  • A voting seat on the UMass board as well as on the three education boards
  • Approval of mission statements and five-year master plans, both at the departmental level and, within higher education, at the institutional level
  • Approval of budget and capital outlay requests at the departmental and institutional levels
Maintains Existing Education Boards
  • Expands seats on each board by two
  • Installs the secretary as a voting member on each board
  • Staggers the board terms so that there are a fixed number of appointments that come up each year
  • Removes the peer commissioners from each board
  • Other existing powers of the boards remain unchanged
Additional provisions
  • Provides governor with authority to appoint the chair of the UMass board
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