May 20, 2015 School Committee Meeting

Agenda

Regular Meeting of the Quincy School Committee
Wednesday, May 20, 2015, 6:30 pm
Coddington Building

I. Approval of Minutes: Regular Meeting Minutes for May 6, 2015.

II. Open Forum: An opportunity for community input regarding the Quincy Public Schools. After giving his or her name and address, each speaker may make a presentation of no more than four minutes to the School Committee. An individual may not exchange their time or yield to others.

III. Superintendent’s Report:

A. Inspiring Quincy

B. Recognitions: National Honor Society

C. Beyond the Bell Initiative

D. Partnership Events

E. MSBA/Sterling Middle School Project Designer Selection

F. Parent Academies

G. Spring Concerts

H. School Surveys

I. Home-School Connections: Amelio Della Chiesa Early Childhood Center and Atherton Hough Elementary School Monthly Newsletters; Quincy High School Technology Engineering Newsletter

IV. Old Business:

A. Physical Restraint Policy Review (Vote)

B. Emergency Response Policy (Vote)

C. Facilities Dedication: Atlantic Middle School Fields (Vote)

V. New Business:

A. FY2016 Budget Dr. DeCristofaro

B. Park Department Update Mr. Cassani

C. Elementary School Above-Level Students Ms. Isola

VI. Additional Business:

VII. Communications:

A. Upcoming School Committee Meetings (Coddington Building):

1. FY2016 Budget Public Hearing, June 1, 2015, 6:00 pm

2. June 10, 2015, 7:00 pm

B. Upcoming Subcommittee Meetings (Coddington Building):

1. FY2016 Budget & Finance, Thursday, May 28, 5:00 pm

2. Special Education, Thursday, May 28, 6:00 pm

VIII. Reports of Subcommittees:

  1. FY2016 Budget & Finance: Mrs. Hubley to report on the May 11 and May 18, 2015 meetings.

  2. Health, Transportation, & Safety: Mr. DiBona to report on the May 11, 2015 meeting

IX. Executive Session: Negotiations

X. Adjournment:


Subcommittees of the School Committee

Budget & Finance
Hubley/Bregoli, DiBona, Isola, Koch, Mahoney, McCarthy

Facilities and Security
McCarthy/Bregoli/Hubley

  1. Sterling Building Plans Referred to Subcommittee by the School Building Task Force in 1998.

  2. Houses on Saville Avenue Referred to Subcommittee at the May 18, 2011 School Committee Meeting. Currently home to the City’s Public Building department, the School Committee and Superintendent see no future educational uses for these properties.

  3. President’s City Inn Referred to Subcommittee at the October 10, 2012 School Committee Meeting. Safety concerns have been expressed about this property that abuts the new Central Middle School. Current construction plans were reviewed at the March 18, 2014 Subcommittee Meeting.

  4. North Quincy High School Campus Expansion/Teel Field Project Referred at the January 22, 2014 School Committee Meeting. A presentation on the proposed enhancements will be scheduled.  

Health, Transportation & Safety
DiBona/Bregoli/McCarthy

  1. School Meal Charges Referred to Subcommittee at the March 21, 2012 School Committee Meeting. New state and federal regulations require formalization of the school meal charges policy.

  2. Science Lab Safety: Referred from the Teaching and Learning Subcommittee at the April 2, 2012 meeting. Monitoring of supplies will be handled by School Safety Teams.

  3. Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) Referred to Subcommittee at the September 24, 2012 Special School Committee Meeting. Student Support Services working with Lincoln Hancock, Clifford Marshall, and Parker Elementary Schools on piloting this initiative.

  4. Traffic Concerns at North Quincy High School Referred to Subcommittee at the March 5, 2014 School Committee Meeting. Concerns about East Squantum Street crosswalk/parking lot entrance.

  5. Solar Array Installation on School Roofs Referred from the Facilities & Security Subcommittee on September 10, 2014. Monitoring of the ongoing projects and the educational opportunities.

  6. Learn to Swim Referred at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee Meeting. Monitoring the ongoing partnership between QPS and the South Shore YMCA.

  7. Farm to School Referred at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee Meeting. Monitoring the Planning Grant rollout, a collaboration of QPS and the Planning Department.

  8. CPR Certification Referred from the Policy Subcommittee at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee meeting. Grade 8 students will be certified through Health classes.

  9. Before School Exercise Programs Referred at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee meeting. Monitoring the implementation of these programs across QPS.

  10. Food Services Technology Referred at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee meeting. Exploring the options for further publicizing the advantages of these new systems.

Policy
Bregoli/Isola/Hubley

  1. Graduation Requirements Referred to Subcommittee at the September 7, 2011 School Committee Meeting and discussed at the October 11, 2011 School Policy Subcommittee. The discussion centered around adding a fourth year of Math as a graduation requirement; the issue is tabled until more is known about the impact of the new Common Core Standards on the Massachusetts frameworks.

  2. New Educator Evaluations Referred at the September 7, 2011 School Committee Meeting and shared with the Teaching and Learning Subcommittee. Further discussion will be held in joint Subcommittee Meetings and Executive Session as it pertains to collective bargaining.

  3. High School Community Service Referred to Subcommittee at the December 14, 2011 School Committee Meeting. In the 2012-13 school year, Grades 10 and 11 completed requirement. In the 2013-14 school year, Grades 11 and 12 completed the requirement. In 2014-15, Grades 9-11 plus any seniors who did not complete their Grade 11 requirement will perform Community Service.

  4. Advertising/Sponsorship Opportunities Referred at the June 13, 2012 School Committee Meeting. Review and discussion of amending the existing policy requested to explore the possibility of raising revenue by accepting advertising sponsorships.

  5. Residency Referred at the September 18, 2013 Special School Committee Meeting. Review of existing policy and expansion to include additional information on verification process.

  6. Review of High School Academic and Extracurricular Programs Referred at the November 13, 2013 School Committee Meeting. A comparison of the offerings at both schools to be analyzed to ensure equitable and parallel opportunities for all students at both facilities.      

  7. Open Enrollment Referred at the October 8, 2014 School Committee meeting for review and discussion to focus on the timeline for placement decisions and communication to parents.

  8. Middle School Grading System Referred at the December 10, 2014 School Committee meeting for review and discussion.

  9. Emergency Procedures Policy Referred at the December 10, 2014 School Committee meeting for review and updating of the existing policy to reflect current standard protocols.

  10. Physical Restraint Policy Referred at the April 8, 2015 School Committee meeting for review and updating of existing policy to reflect new legislation taking effect January 1, 2016.

  11. Facilities Dedication Referred at the April 8, 2015 School Committee meeting to consider renaming the Atlantic Middle School Fields in memory of Joseph W. Koch.

  12. 2016-2017 School Year Calendar Referred at the April 8, 2015 School Committee meeting.

  13. Weather Cancellation Schoolwork Referred at the April 8, 2015 School Committee meeting and shared with the Teaching and Learning Subcommittee. Exploring options for creating Policy for schoolwork during extended periods of weather-related school cancellations.

Special Education
Mahoney/DiBona/McCarthy

  1. Student Information for Substitute Teachers Originally referred to Subcommittee at the January 17, 2007 School Committee Meeting. Aspen Student Information System Special Education module reports will be utilized to share information with substitute teachers beginning in September 2015.

  2. Special Education Program Assessment Referred to Subcommittee at the January 28, 2012 Special School Committee Meeting. This will be an ongoing discussion of the curriculum initiatives for Special Education.

Rules, Post Audit & Oversight
Hubley/Isola/Mahoney

Teaching and Learning
Isola/Hubley/Mahoney

  1. New Educator Evaluations Referred at the September 7, 2011 School Committee Meeting and shared with the School Policy Subcommittee. The 2013-2014 school year is the first year of the new Educator Evaluation process and a collaboration will continue between the School Committee, Superintendent’s Leadership Team, and the Quincy Education Association around issues related to the implementation.

Ad Hoc Committees: Channel 22

Sterling Building Committee
DiBona/McCarthy

Sterling/Point Webster Grade 5
McCarthy/Bregoli/DiBona/Hubley/Isola/Koch/Mahoney

Created at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee meeting to review issues related to Grade 5 being located in middle school buildings.

School District Maps
Isola/Bregoli/DiBona/Hubley/Koch/Mahoney/McCarthy

Created at the September 10, 2014 Special School Committee meeting to review issues related to school district maps.

Minutes

Quincy, Massachusetts – May 20, 2015
Regular Meeting of the Quincy School Committee

Regular Meeting

A regular meeting of the Quincy School Committee was held on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at Central Middle School. Present were Mr. Paul Bregoli, Mr. Noel DiBona, Ms. Barbara Isola, Mayor Thomas Koch, Mrs. Anne Mahoney, Mr. David McCarthy, and Mrs. Kathryn Hubley, Vice Chair.

Vice-Chair Presiding

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The Superintendent called the roll and Mrs. Mahoney was absent (but arrived at 6:35 p.m. during Executive Session). Also present were: Dr. Richard DeCristofaro, Secretary; Ms. Laura Owens, Clerk; Mr. Michael Draicchio, Mrs. Mary Fredrickson, Ms. Molly Good, Deputy Superintendent Kevin Mulvey, Mr. James Mullaney, Mrs. Maura Papile, Ms. Cara Pekarcik, Ms. Madeline Roy, Mr. Keith Segalla, Mr. Robert Shaw, Mr. Lawrence Taglieri, Ms. Judy Todd; Ms. Allison Cox, President, Quincy Education Association.

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There was a moment of silence in honor of members of the armed forces serving overseas.

Mr. McCarthy made a motion to take the agenda out of order and move to Executive Session. Mr. Bregoli seconded the motion and on a roll call vote, the ayes have it, 6-0. Mrs. Mahoney was absent.

Mrs. Hubley noted that School Committee would return to the Regular meeting after the Executive Session.

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School Committee resumed the Regular meeting at 7:00 pm.

Regular Meeting Minutes Approved 5/6/15

Mr. McCarthy made a motion, seconded by Mr. Bregoli, to approve the Regular Meeting minutes for May 6, 2015. On a voice vote, the ayes have it.

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Open Forum

As there was no one who wished to speak at Open Forum, School Committee moved to the next item on the agenda.

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Superintendent's Report

Dr. DeCristofaro opened the Superintendent’s Report by welcoming the members of the Class of 2015 who have been inducted into the National Honor Society. The four pillars of National Honor Society are Scholarship, Character, Leadership, and Service.

North Quincy High School: Marguerite Belcher, Emily Bryson, Julia Bryson, Courtney Campo, Amy Chan, Wai Ki Chan, Cindy Chau, Alex Chen, Alicia Chen, Emily Chen, Hong Gao Chen, Lisa Chi, Jessica Diep, Jessica Eynatian, Li Wen Wong Fang, Cassandra Feeney, Gabrielle Flaherty, Ciara Forde, Egista Gjini, Madison Hally, Jenny Kung, Yamin Mu Han, Yamin Phyu Han, Amanada Huang, Victoria Jiang, Jason Lee, Samantha Lee, Deanna Leung, Shiqing Liang, Jiayin Luo, Kelly Luo, Emily Luu, Sumire Maki, Olivia McEvoy, Patrick Mei, Julia Mendros, Sarah Molloy, Michael Mullaney, Cindy Nguyen, Eliza Song-Givens, Kyi Thwin, Vincent Tran, Shanshan Wu, Johanna Yu, Emily Zheng, Xue Ling Zou

Quincy High School: Amira Abdelaziz, Marisa Abundis, Ralph Besid, Ursula Biba, Yversen Boutin, Carly Brilliant, Christopher Buzzell, Marina Chafa, Michelle Chen, Jeanne Chin, Isabella Cobble, Lydia Culp, Madison Davis, Justina Dearden, Katy Deng, Kassandra Dineen, Nya Domkam, Aaron Ha, Mark Hajjar, Emily Hatfield, Jennifer Hong, Maxwell Hurley, Cristian Isalguez, Emma Kelly, Emma Kimmell, Aurelie Lafontant, Michelle Le, Kunyi Li, Jerod Lin, Emily Lo, Maryanne Ly, Monica Ly, Mary Lynch, Colleen Madden, Steven Marstjepovic, Lauren Matthies, Angela McDonald, Emma Papile, Kerry Phelan, Noreen Plabutong, Sabrina Rauch, Robert Salvucci, Jessika Santos, Hiba Senhaj, Anastacia Silveira, Tatiana Silveira, Nicole Strauss, Christine Tam, Jenny Tam Thi, John Traynor, Lily Vo, Nicole Welliver, Henry Yip

Ms. Isola thanked students for their accomplishments, their teachers for guiding them, and their parents and family members for supporting students. Mrs. Mahoney told the students to take pride in their accomplishments as we all do.

Mr. Bregoli noted several of his former players being recognized, dedicated students and athletes. Mrs. Hubley congratulated all of the students.

Dr. DeCristofaro noted that many of the students have been Quincy Public Schools students since elementary school. They have forged connections and relationships with their peers and have many accomplishments, thanks in part to their dedicated teachers. Dr. DeCristofaro said he is incredibly proud of these soon to be graduates; that this is just the beginning of all the great things they will do. Dr. DeCristofaro concluded by thanking the National Honor Society advisors and principals.

After a brief recess, School Committee resumed the meeting with the Inspire Quincy video, featuring Hairspray at Atlantic Middle School, the John & Abigail Adams Orchestra, Spring Concerts, Quincy Retired Teacher Association Scholarships, Germantown Neighborhood Community Center, Community Service initiatives at Atherton Hough, Quincy High School, North Quincy High School, the ACES Project at Clifford Marshall, Point Webster Students of the Month, Squantum Elementary School Outdoor Garden Dedication, Quincy High School Fashion Show, Lincoln Hancock Lego Math Night, Beyond the Bell events at multiple schools, the QPS Walk for Wellness, and the Adams Cup Robotics Challenge for Grades 5-8.

The North Quincy High School Senior Prom was Friday, May 15 and was a successful event capped by the Senior Stay Out. Many parents were involved in keeping students safe by organizing this all-night party for seniors and their dates. The Quincy High School Senior Prom and Senior Stay Out is Friday, May 29.

The Quincy Retired Teachers Association presented seniors from the Class of 2015 with over $30,000 in scholarships at a ceremony on May 12. Graduation is Monday, June 8 (North Quincy High School ) and Tuesday, June 9 (Quincy High School), both held at Veterans Stadium at 6:00 pm.

The annual JRDF Walk will be held on Saturday, May 30 at 10:00 am beginning at Beechwood Knoll.

Thanks to Principals Ruth Witmer, Robin Moreira, and Dan Gilbert who worked with Erin Perkins and Madeline Roy to create school surveys for elementary and middle schools. These online surveys have been shared with parents for completion by the end of May.

The Squantum Elementary School Outdoor Classroom Dedication was held on May 18. Thanks to Principal Steve Sylvia and Mrs. Maureen Geary, Mayor Koch, and the Community Preservation fund for the creation of this beautiful space.

85 members of the John & Abigail Adams Orchestra performed on Monday, May 11 at Quincy High School under the direction of Mike DeMarco and Jane Aiello. Students from both high schools took part in the recent Music in the Park festival; high school choral and band students competed with programs from across New England and the North Quincy High School chorus placed 2nd overall.

For Quincy School~Community Partnership events, over 270 students from Grades 5-8 participated in the Adams Cup on May 15. Thanks to Ed Smith, Mike Marani, Keith Segalla, and volunteers from the high school robotics team. Upcoming events include the Community Service Learning breakfast on Wednesday, May 27; the Student Athletic Summit on Wednesday, June 3 at Granite Links for incoming captains of athletic teams from both high schools; and Flag Day at Lincoln Hancock on Wednesday, June 10. NAGE has made their annual donation of 20 American flags for all Quincy Public Schools buildings.

Quincy High School’s Skills USA students competed at the Massachusetts State Conference under the direction of Ed Holmes. Medal winners were: Samantha Le, Grace Hall, Jane Kuang, Michael Fernald, Bernardo Teixeira, and Mario Ragusa (Bronze Medal ~ Team ~ Parliamentary Procedure); Brianna McCombs (Bronze Medal ~ Criminal Justice); Ming Quan Li (Silver Medal ~ Related Technical Math).

A Parent Academy was held on Monday, May 18 for the new Elementary Report Card. Thanks to Ellen Hunter, Erin Perkins, and Keith Segalla for organizing the event and the many teachers and administrators who volunteer to be part of these presentations. Additional parent information events will be held on the new elementary report card in the fall.

For the Sterling Middle School project, there was a Designer Selection meeting at the Massachusetts School Building Authority on May 19 with representatives from the Sterling Building Committee. The two finalists, SMMA and Ai3 both presented and Ai3 (designer of Central Middle School) was selected. At the June 10 meeting, the Owner’s Project Manager Joslin Lesser and Designer Ai3 will present.

Beyond the Bell has far exceeded expectations, with classroom and program teachers and community partners sponsoring many different events: the Walk for Wellness, collaboration of SADD and Health Services staff; Literacy programs; Student Artists in the Community Event on May 30 at the Art Spot; Hoops for Health at Quincy High School; therapeutic activity days at Snug Harbor, Squantum, and Sterling included Occupational and Physical Therapists; and a Lego activity day at the Parker Elementary Schools sponsored by the Quincy Parent Advisory Council to Special Education.

Home-School Connections for the Della Chiesa Early Childhood Center, Atherton Hough Elementary School; and Quincy High School Technology program were shared with the School Committee.

Mrs. Mahoney left the meeting at 7:55 pm.

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Old Business

Physical Restraint Policy Review

Mr. McCarthy made a motion to amend the Physical Restraint Policy by adopting the new law in its entirety. Mr. Bregoli seconded the motion and on a roll call vote, the ayes have it 6-0. Mrs. Mahoney was absent.

Emergency Response Policy Review

Mr. McCarthy made a motion to amend the Emergency Response Policy as presented. Ms. Isola seconded the motion and on a roll call vote, the ayes have it 6- 0. Mrs. Mahoney was absent.

Facilities Dedication: Atlantic Middle School Fields

Mr. Bregoli made a motion to dedicate the Atlantic Middle School Fields in honor of Joseph Koch. Ms. Isola seconded the motion and on a roll call vote, the ayes have it 5-0. Mrs. Mahoney was absent; Mayor Koch abstained.

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New Business

Mrs. Hubley asked to take the agenda out of order and moved to Item B, Parks Department Update.

Parks Department Update

Mr. Cassani presented his semi-annual update on school grounds and athletic fields. The extensive winter snowfall delayed the start of a number of projects, mowing began at the end of April. Cleaner Greener Quincy was tremendously helpful and it was very inspiring to see the students participate. The efforts in cleanup and spreading mulch was instrumental in getting the school grounds ready for spring. The Coddington Building landscaping was affected by the winter but has been restored.

At Snug Harbor, the courtyard and left hand side of the building have received special attention. Safety fiber has been installed at a number of playgrounds and equipment at playgrounds across the city evaluated for national safety codes.

At Broad Meadows, the History Girls project is culminating on June 24 with the dedication of the Passamagessett Knoll at Broad Meadows Marsh. Thanks to the students’ work and the guidance of teacher Ron Adams, we are able to acknowledge the earliest residents of Quincy.

The old Quincy High School green space project is one of the most ambitious ever undertaken. City workers have done 90% of the grading work and landscape designer Paul Franz has served as general contractor. Tree and shrub installation is underway, sod has been laid. Mr. Cassani thanked Greg McMillen for his efforts, the project should be completed within the next four weeks.

At Teel Field, the project is underway as of Monday, May 15. This is a very complex project, meant to address drainage and flooding in the neighborhood. Pre-load will take four to six months and turf will be installed next spring. This project is a longterm investment in the children of Quincy.

Therrien Field will receive an overhaul, irrigation, and new sod. All athletic fields will have been upgraded when this project is complete.

Mr. McCarthy asked whether Teel Field will be enclosed and locked as the stadium is and Mr. Cassani confirmed this. Mr. McCarthy said the open space next to Quincy High School will be a welcome addition, thanks also to Joseph Koch for his work. Mr. McCarthy mentioned that the back hill on Huntley Road is not consistently mowed and Mr. Cassani said that the summer help begins next week.

Mr. McCarthy said that the grass outside the principal’s office at Quincy High School has been an issue; needs irrigation or perhaps replacement with shrubbery or mulch. Mr. Cassani said this can be evaluated over the summer.

Mr. McCarthy said the playgrounds across the city all look great and there is tremendous use at all sites. Outside the schools, Adams Field and Mitchell McCoy are dusty, is there a way to adjust the irrigation schedule. Mr. Cassani said it was amazing how fast we went from too much moisture to the fields being dry.

Mr. McCarthy thanked the Parks Department for their work on snow removal. It was a tremendous effort, working with the Department of Public Works and school custodians, week after week. The efforts really made a difference in keeping school grounds, streets, and sidewalks safe.

Mr. Bregoli seconded Mr. McCarthy’s thanks. The winter was a monumental amount of snow. Looking around the city, there are so many projects to enhance playgrounds and facilities, and he hopes everyone will have patience. The end result will be worth the effort and the time invested.

Mayor Koch thanked Mr. Cassani for his leadership and patience with his interest and oversight in the department. The quality of parks and playground has been supported by the infusion of Community Preservation funds, and Mr. Cassani’s management. Mayor Koch said the plans are still developing on memorializing former Quincy High School English department chair Bruce MacDonald in the new green space next to the school.

Mr. DiBona said that the Parks Department does a great job managing the many projects and maintaining schools and parks to benefit our students.

Dr. DeCristofaro thanked Mr. Cassani for his responsiveness and relationship with all of the principals, Quincy Public Schools is in good hands with the Parks Department staff.

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FY2016 Quincy Public Schools Budget

Dr. DeCristofaro and Mr. Mullaney presented a review of the proposed FY2016 Budget. Budget & Finance Subcommittee meetings were held on May 11 and May 18 to review both the expenses and subsidized services. Dr. DeCristofaro presented an overview of building, restoring, and expanding that has been possible under the budgets of the last few years. In the last few years, at least 20 Academic Classroom Teacher positions have been created, free Full-Day Kindergarten maintained and full-day Aides restored; Literacy, English Language Learner, Art, Music, and Instrumental programs have all been increased; Middle School Library and Technology and High School Health Interventionists restored; Middle and High School Advanced Placement, Middle School Foreign Language, Elementary School Library, Occupational and Special Education have all been expanded.

For Academic Support, positions have been added for Guidance, Psychologists, Attendance Officers, Special Education and ELL Aides, Extra-curricular programs at all levels, and Professional Development facilitators for Physical Education, Health, Music, Art, Speech, and Library. Non-academic support includes increased positions for Custodial Services, Office Aides, and Athletics. Academic Expenses include increased appropriations for repairs, screening and medical, testing, textbooks, and instructional equipment purchases. For non-academic expenses, increased funding has provided for the acquisition of vehicles and plant equipment.

As always, the budget process keeps students in the center. The Superintendent works with Principals and members of the Superintendent’s Leadership Team to identify areas of consideration and address possible areas of impact. The Superintendent requests School Committee input for creating priorities and options and then acts on those priorities to create a proposed draft budget and finalize it through discussion and public comment.

Mr. Mullaney introduced the FY2016 Budget of $99,259,723, a 2% increase over the FY2015 funding. The budget is made up of the Mayor’s appropriation of $95,587,723 and projected Circuit Breaker Funding of $3,672,000. This levelservice funded budget allows for QPS to meet all contractual obligations including percentage raises and step/level increases, cover the gap from the elimination of the Full-Day Kindergarten grant at the state level. The funding also allows anticipated increases in Special Education tuitions and transportation. With 16 professional staff members retiring, there is anticipated breakage of $584,000. The bottom line after meeting all current staffing and program requirements is $1,376,300 available for budget building.

Projected enrollment and trends are carefully analyzed to ensure that class sizes are well within School Committee guidelines. Recommended additions for the FY2016 budget are an academic classroom teacher at the elementary level, a middle school Technology Engineering teacher, two English Language Learner teachers, one Instrumental Music teacher, fully funding Kindergarten Aides in the QPS budget, increasing Special Education aides by 20 positions. Increased funding for Elementary School Extracurricular, Professional Development, Special Education tuitions and transportation, technology acquisition.

For Subsidized Services (Food Services, Athletics, Transportation, and Building Rentals), the recommendation is for all fees to remain as is for FY2016.

Mr. McCarthy noted that this is his last budget as a School Committee member. As always, the Superintendent’s Leadership Team has done a great job preparing School Committee, with information readily available. It has been a pleasure to work on these budgets over the years, especially those that restored and expanded services for Quincy Public Schools.

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Elementary School Above Level Students

Ms. Isola made a motion to move Elementary School Above Grade Level Students to Teaching & Learning Subcommittee. Mr. Bregoli seconded the motion and on a voice vote, the ayes have it.

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Communications

Upcoming meetings were announced: School Committee on June 10, 2015; a Public Hearing for the FY2016 Budget on Monday, June 1; Subcommittee Meetings: Special Education on Thursday, May 28, 2015.

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Reports of Subcommittees

Mrs. Hubley noted that all Subcommittee meeting minutes are posted online at www.quincypublicschools.com.

As there were no corrections, the minutes of the May 11, 2015 and May 18, 2015 Budget & Finance and May 11, 2015 Health, Transportation, and Safety Subcommittee meetings were all approved as presented.

Mr. Bregoli removed the three items from Policy Subcommittee: Physical Restraint, Emergency Procedures, and Facilities Dedication.

Mr. Bregoli proposed a Policy Subcommittee on Thursday, June 4 to review residency issues at year end and also the unique programs at each high school.

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Adjournment

Mayor Koch made a motion to adjourn for the evening at 9:00 p.m. The motion was seconded by Mr. McCarthy and on a voice vote, the ayes have it.