Dayton Daily News

Dayton Schools to keep athletic director

Hundreds of teachers also protest at school board meeting.

- By Jeremy P. Kelley Staff Writer

Dayton’s school board approved a two-year contract renewal for district athletic director Mark Baker, in the wake of major state penalties imposed on Dayton Public Schools athletic programs.

The vote was 5-1, with board member Joe Lacey strongly objecting and Hazel Rountree absent. Baker declined comment after the vote.

Last fall, Dunbar’s football team used an ineligible player in two games, causing them to forfeit those games and be knocked out of the playoffs. The eligibilit­y issue was missed by coaches, athletic directors and the principal.

But during the final game of the season, there was a backand-forth debate about the star player’s eligibilit­y. Once it was establishe­d, after he had already played, that he was ineligible, Dunbar officials told players to lose the game on purpose, believing they might still have an avenue to make the playoffs.

The Dunbar coaches said that directive came from Baker, but Baker denied it during subsequent investigat­ions.

Lacey argued that DPS was not taking the issue of “throwing the game” seriously, calling it an unpreceden­ted violation in Ohio high school sports, and saying the district appeared not to want to investigat­e it.

“It looked like there were attempts to not investigat­e the decision of this district to throw a game, to instruct students to cheat,” Lacey said. “The rallying around the people responsibl­e for this really disgusts me.”

Board members Adil Baguirov, Robert Walker and Ron Lee argued that the focus should be on the new policies the district was putting in place to make sure this never happens again, saying it is time to look forward, rather than back.

The Ohio High School Athletic Associatio­n placed all DPS athletic programs on three years of probation, fined them $10,000 and ordered administra­tors to undergo training, citing the district for “a lack of administra­tive responsibi­lity and institutio­nal control.”

Teachers rally

Hundreds of teachers attended the school board meeting, then rallied on the street corner outside, as contract negotiatio­ns between Dayton’s teachers union and the district drag on.

“It’s going to take ... a deliberate decision on the part of this district to put the teachers and the students they teach first in decision-making,” teachers union President David Romick said. “Teacher working conditions are student learning conditions.”

The current contract expires this summer. Romick said through 20 sessions, contract negotiatio­ns have been more complex than usual, with more issues on the table than Romick has seen in the past. Those include teacher pay, the need for guidance counselors and staffed libraries in DPS schools, a move to fiveday preschool, and more.

DPS Superinten­dent Rhonda Corr said she thinks the parties are a lot closer and had a good discussion Wednesday.

“We have the utmost respect for our teachers, for Mr. Romick, for the Dayton Education Associatio­n, and we want to do right by them,” Corr said. “But in a negotiatio­n, everything’s a little bit of a give and take. We want to try to implement some things that are better for students as well.”

Layoffs not planned

The 33 paraprofes­sionals (classroom aides) who were at risk of layoff from DPS last fall will have the opportunit­y to move into preschool aide positions next school year.

DPS assistant superinten­dent Elizabeth Lolli outlined a broad reconfigur­ation, in which Title 1 funding previously used for those paraprofes­sionals will be shifted to pay for teacher-leaders in each school. She said the district already has 90 applicatio­ns.

Lolli said those teacher-leaders would be in coaching and teaching roles, rather than administra­tion. She said those master teachers will work in curriculum implementa­tion with teacher teams and building leaders, so they can spread their expertise.

The district will also add kindergart­en and first-grade phonics teachers to work with students who test below benchmarks on reading tests.

“That’s a good thing for the district that we’re not going to be losing any of our highly qualified paraprofes­sionals because of RIF or layoff,” Lolli said. “We’re very pleased that we’re able to make that personnel change.”

Bus purchases

The district unanimousl­y approved what board members said was a contract for the purchase of 115 new school buses, including a $2.5 million down payment this year, toward a $9.73 million total cost.

The resolution the board voted on was not attached to the agenda Wednesday night. Board member Adil Baguirov touted the 2.06 percent interest rate he said the district got.

School board members had a heated discussion on the bus issue last month, but Wednesday’s vote was unanimous.

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