Two proposals that together would reduce the equivalent of 33 full-time classified jobs are action items on the agenda for the Sonoma Valley Unified School District board of trustees’ meeting on Thursday.
Two proposals that together would reduce the equivalent of 33 full-time classified jobs are action items on the agenda for the Sonoma Valley Unified School District board of trustees’ meeting on Thursday, Feb. 13.
If approved, 19 positions would be discontinued effective July 1, 2025, and 14 additional jobs would be eliminated no later than the beginning of the 2025-26 academic year.
Two other action items on the agenda are aimed at shortening the length of board meetings. Bylaw 9320 stipulates that each regular meeting would end at 9 p.m. unless a majority of trustees votes to extend it. Bylaw 9323 would limit public comment at each meeting to 30 minutes unless the board president, with consent of other board members, decides to extend it.
The board will also be considering whether or not to approve comprehensive school safety plans.
The meeting is scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m. with an open session in which public comment on closed session items can be made. It will be followed by a closed session and will reconvene in an open session — which will include an opportunity for public comment on agenda items — at approximately 6 p.m.
The meeting will be held at the school district offices at 17850 Railroad Ave. in Sonoma. It will also be accessible at this link: https://sonomaschools-org.zoom.us/j/94904712189. The webinar ID number is 949 0471 2189 and the telephone number is 1 669-900-9128.
Reach the reporter, Dan Johnson, at daniel.johnson@sonomanews.com.
Jobs are opening up in the sports industry as teams expand and money flows into the industry.Excel Search &
Fired federal workers are looking at what their futures hold. One question that's come up: Can they find similar salaries and benefits in the private sector?
After two days of increases, mortgage rates are back down again today. According to Zillow, the average 30-year fixed rate has decreased by four basis points t
Julia Coronado: I think it's too early to say that the U.S. is heading to a recession. Certainly, we have seen the U.S. just continue t