HomeMy WebLinkAbout2024-08-19 Euless Articles
Grapevine extends school resource officer
agreements with Grapevine-Colleyville ISD
| 1:59 PM Aug 15, 2024 CDT
Updated 1:59 PM Aug 15, 2024 CDT
Trey Toney
Grapevine police officer Trey Toney is the school resource officer at Grapevine High
School. (Courtesy GCISD)
The Grapevine City Council passed an interlocal agreement to fund school resources
officers during the Aug. 6 meeting.
That comes eight days after the Grapevine-Colleyville ISD board of trustees approved
the first part of the agreement.
Under its agreement with Grapevine, the district will pay the city a little more than $1.78
million each year for school resource officers. That action was approved during the July
29 meeting.
The district will use funds from its tax increment fund that were freed up by an
agreement with the city earlier this year, according to city documents.
The details
SROs from Grapevine will be stationed at the following schools:
Grapevine High School
Grapevine Middle School
Cross Timbers Middle School
Each elementary school in Grapevine
Bear Creek Elementary School in Euless
Grapevine Police Chief Mike Hamlin says the SRO in the Euless school is paid through
a 50-50 split between GCISD and the city of Euless.
Also of note
Grapevine will also provide a roving SRO to cover for any absences as well as a
sergeant to supervise, assist and serve as an SRO when needed. Hamlin said during
the 2023-24 school year, 200 shifts had to be covered between the 10 schools.
In their own words
“I’m very proud of the SRO team and I’m proud of the department,” Hamlin said. “We
made a cataclysmic shift to staff the SRO and the organization responded well.”
Delay in school accountability ratings extends
uncertainty for Tarrant County districts
by Matthew Sgroi
August 15, 2024 5:04 pm
Fort Worth ISD is “disappointed” over not being able to showcase progress made
between the 2022-23 and 2023-24 school years due to another delay in the release of
the Texas Education Agency’s annual school ratings, the district said in a recent
statement.
The anticipated Aug. 15 publication of A-F ratings was halted by a Travis County court
order Aug. 12 due to ongoing legal disputes over the state’s revised accountability
measures. Thanks to the legal challenges, schools and districts throughout the state
haven’t been graded since the 2021-22 school year.
For educators and parents seeking to gauge school performance throughout Tarrant
County, the uncertainty that began in September 2023 — when grades were also
withheld due to similar legal disputes — will continue, according to legal and education
experts.
Across Tarrant County, school districts are divided on their feelings toward the grades’
release being blocked this year.
While Fort Worth ISD welcomes the eventual release, its neighbor to the south, Crowley
ISD, expressed support for the delay in releasing the ratings. Superintendent Michael
McFarland cited concerns over the ratings’ accuracy given the current state of the
assessment tools.
“I definitely think it’s good that they’re holding them off,” McFarland told the Report.
He emphasized the importance of the district having an accurate and clear indication of
the results of the effort put into its schools. With the current system, which many
districts expect to lower their letter grades, that wouldn’t be possible, McFarland said.
Crowley ISD received a B in 2022.
The temporary restraining order issued by Travis County Judge Karin Crump stems
from a lawsuit filed Aug. 12 by North Texas districts Forney ISD and Crandall ISD, along
with Fort Stockton ISD, Pecos-Barstow-Toyah ISD and Kingsville ISD near Corpus
Christi.
Initial lawsuits filed in 2023 involved more than 100 Texas school districts, including Fort
Worth ISD, Crowley ISD and Arlington ISD. Those challenges focused on the TEA
decision to change the system’s metrics to one that districts said would hurt their
ratings.
The rating system would be more rigorous, districts said, including within it higher
benchmarks for categories like college, career and military readiness.
Districts also said the changes weren’t sufficiently communicated and were applied
retroactively.
Fort Worth ISD, which was given a B rating by the TEA in 2022, said that while the
district respects the judicial process and awaits the forthcoming outcome, it ’s since seen
progress.
“During this time, we have successfully moved more campuses to A, B and C ratings,
while also reducing the number of D and F schools,” the district’s statement said.
The final outcome Fort Worth ISD awaits could be months away, TC U professor
Matthew Montgomery said. While Crump barred the release until a hearing scheduled
for Aug. 26, afterward the judge could either lift the restraining order or continue to block
TEA from releasing the A-F ratings until the case is decided.
“I imagine partisan judges in Travis County helped with this decision,” Montgomery said.
He predicts a challenging path ahead for the state education agency and its prospects
of releasing ratings in the coming months.
“It’ll get appealed to the Third Court of Appeals, where all six judges are Democrats, so
TEA will probably find a hostile crowd there,” he said. “It’ll probably have to go to the
Texas Supreme Court to get overturned.”
The other 18 districts throughout Tarrant County, like Castleberry ISD and A rlington
ISD, also anticipated an Aug. 15 release. Castleberry ISD, a district in west Fort Worth
that also serves River Oaks and Sansom Park, is proud of the academic growth it has
shown across its schools the past year, Superintendent Renee Smith -Faulkner told the
Report Aug. 7. Castleberry ISD was given a B by the TEA in 2022.
Still, Arlington ISD, which also received a B in 2022, recently applied TEA’s new grading
standards to the district’s 2022 data. Its B score dropped 7 points to a C.
Arlington ISD trustee Justin Chapa said during an Aug. 1 board meeting that the new
standards will hurt the district’s upward momentum and make recent progress appear to
be a decline.
Castleberry ISD and Arlington ISD did not respond to a request for comment on the
latest delays before publication. Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD, which was given an A by the
TEA in 2022 as it received the highest-performing STAAR results in Tarrant County,
said it was not prepared to comment on the recent court order.
“We have been super busy this week getting students settled,” HEB ISD spokesperson
Deanne Hullender said.