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5Essentials

Parents, students, teachers asked to take state survey

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A bill Minooka Grade School District received from the village of Minooka is being disputed and all but one school board member present at a meeting this past week agreed to notify the village through a letter.

Both the grade school district and Minooka High School District 111 received bills in the amount of $1,500 for attorney/engineering services related to the new transportation facility co-owned by the school districts.

According to Superintendent Al Gegenheimer, the fee in question is related to the annexation of the property and the district didn’t own the property when the fees were incurred.

“We have a great relationship with the village and we plan to continue that,” Gegenheimer said. “We are not interested in paying this bill, it is not our bill.”

The bill was returned to the village twice asking that the fee be waive, but the school district was billed again, Gegenheimer said. He has since drafted a letter from the full board asking for the cost to the district be waived.

Board member Doug Martin called the letter unprofessional and asked his name be removed from it.

“I suspect when the village gets this letter our relationship will go down a notch,” Martin said.

The $1,500 would be better spent on books for the students, Gegenheimer said.
“We are already in a deficit spending position.”

Part time Special Education position added

At Wednesday’s regular meeting, the board of education approved the creation of a part-time special education position for the early childhood program.

The program currently has four full-time educators who teach eight sections – morning and afternoon. As of January, there was only one opening in the program and a second spot opened up when a student left the area.

Four children are scheduled for early intervention screenings in Minooka and may qualify for the program. Additional screenings are scheduled in Coal City, Gardner, Minooka and Morris between now and April, said Special Education Director Tiffany Staab.

According to the state-mandated teacher-student ratio, one more part time teacher will create room for five additional students in the program, said Staab. Ten students would require a teacher’s aide to assist and 20 students would require opening an afternoon session as well.

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