BOE may have to cut before and after school program

PPCSD hears from concerned community

PINE PLAINS — From receiving an update on how things are faring at Stissing Mountain Junior/Senior High School to fielding issues raised by local residents, the Pine Plains Central School District (PPCSD) Board of Education (BOE) dealt with a number of parental concerns on Wednesday, Dec. 1.

The BOE met in the high school library at 7 p.m.; the meeting was live streamed to www.ppcsd.org.

BOCES award

A presentation of the recent Dutchess Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES) Student of Distinction award started things off.

Dutchess BOCES Alternative High School Principal Erin Piquet said she was honored to recognize Brian Johnson as November’s Student of Distinction. Piquet said Brian is an extremely motivated student and has been making excellent progress and meeting his goals. She commended him for balancing his work at BOCES’ Alternative High School and the Career & Technical Institute.

High school update

Using a three-pronged approach, Stissing Mountain High School Principal Tara Grieb offered a comprehensive overview of how the junior/senior high school, its students and its families have been doing as of late.

Grieb highlighted academic accomplishments during the pandemic and stressed the impact the students’ social-emotional wellbeing has had on their schoolwork. She also spoke of the social-emotional issues that students said they’ve been dealing with during the health crisis.

Healthy Kids program

Superintendent Martin Handler then spoke about the Before and After School Program (otherwise known as the Healthy Kids program). He reminded the board that Healthy Kids does not staff the program at PPCSD, which is why the district stepped in and tried to run the program on its own.

However, Handler said the district is currently having problems staffing the program.

There are about 15 students enrolled in the morning session with one district paraprofessional running it, and about nine students enrolled in the afternoon session with two district paraprofessionals running the later session.

“The problem we have is we have no redundancy,” Handler explained. “If one of those people is out, we have a problem filling it.”

Handler reminded the BOE that there are parents who depend on the program for childcare. He said Seymour Smith Intermediate Learning Center Principal Julie Roberts and Cold Spring Early Learning Center Principal Gian Starr have reached out to district staff to ask if anyone is willing to help work extra hours in the Healthy Kids program — without luck.

As the PPCSD nears the holidays, Handler said he’s not sure if it will be able to continue the program after the break. He said he wanted to “give the families heads up if that’s going to be the case,” adding while the district won’t “pull the plug” at this time, but when the BOE meets on Wednesday, Dec. 15, it will have to make a decision.

Public comment

Among those who spoke during public comment, district parent Mary Douglass shared her concerns about the presence of “extremely disturbing books” in the Stissing Mountain school library and e-books in the school district that she said depict  graphic sexual content.

As a parent of an 11-year-old boy who loves graphic novels, she said she was “horrified to see pictures, words and graphics in the district’s books displaying such content,” one of which she said included pictures of oral sex being performed.

Douglass also spoke of a rumor she heard that parents had threatened BOE members with physical harm. Douglass said she believed the rumor began when the BOE meetings recently switched to being held virtually after meetings got unruly. She said she never once heard a parent threaten physical harm to a board member or to the superintendent.

“We are parents, not perpetrators,” said Douglass.

She then brought up the recent “shoe drop” at Stissing Mountain, when 80 shoes were placed outside the school building to reflect students who were pulled from school who didn’t comply with the vaccine mandate. Douglass read aloud some of the notes placed inside the shoes by those students’ parents at the BOE meeting.

Raising his concerns about the state’s current mask mandate at the meeting as the latest Omicron variant hits the U.S., Pine Plains resident Scott Cavey spoke at the BOE meeting to share his opinion.

“My stance has been and will continue to be… it has nothing to do with mask breaks and has everything to do with control.”

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