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News

Avenue of Flags seeks volunteers for Memorial Day commemoration

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 17 May 2023
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Avenue of Flags, which each year honors the memories of Lake County’s veterans on Memorial Day, is looking for volunteers for this year’s event.

William Asher, president of the Avenue of Flags, is preparing for the Memorial Day commemoration, which takes place on Monday, May 29.

Flags will be put up at the Lower Lake Cemetery as well as in Kelseyville and Lakeport, Asher said.

Asher said volunteers are needed to meet at 7 a.m. at the Lower Lake Cemetery on Memorial Day to put up flags as well as to transport them to Kelseyville and Lakeport and then back to Lower Lake.

The flags will be taken down at 3 p.m. that day.

For more information or to volunteer, call Asher at 707-900-1652 and leave a message.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

State fisheries hearing to focus on plans for offshore wind and coexistence with California’s storied fishing fleet

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 17 May 2023
Senate Majority Leader Mike McGuire, Chair of the Joint Committee on Fisheries and Aquaculture, or JCFA, as well as Lake County’s representative in the state Senate, is gearing up for Wednesday’s hearing in the State Capitol focused on California’s burgeoning offshore wind industry.

This hearing will explore how to expedite the deployment of green energy while protecting the interests of California’s fishing fleet and ensuring coastal environmental safeguards remain in place.

For the first time, the hearing will bring all sides of the issue together for a groundbreaking discussion that will feature representatives from federal and state agencies, tribal leaders, offshore wind industry representatives, representatives from the fishing fleet, labor leaders and environmental organizations.

Presenters will focus on why offshore wind energy is essential to the State's green energy future and energy supply, the need to incorporate fish and wildlife in the development process, and how wind energy can be compatible with the protection of California’s fisheries.

“This first-of-its-kind hearing will bring all sides of the offshore wind discussion together, ensuring the State can expedite the deployment of this valuable energy resource while protecting the interests of California’s storied fishing fleet and guaranteeing coastal environmental safeguards,” said Sen. McGuire. “It’s critical to have these voices at the same table as we develop the road map for offshore energy, healthy oceans and a thriving fishing fleet to coexist here in the Golden State.”

The hearing begins at 2 p.m. Wednesday, May 17 in the State Capitol Swing Space, 1021 O Street, Room 2100. The public is welcome to attend the hearing.

The hearing will be livestreamed via the Senate website.

For more information about the hearing, visit the committee website.

Superintendent turnover is increasing and gender gaps are barely budging, but accurately assessing the consequences remains a challenge

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Written by: Rachel S. White, University of Tennessee
Published: 17 May 2023

 

A crowd of parents in Orange County, Calif., protest the firing of Superintendent Gunn Marie Hansen. Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Public school superintendents are having a moment, and for many of them, the moment is neither super nor what they intended.

During the last several years, tense school board meetings where superintendents were fired erupted in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Oregon, South Carolina and Virginia.

Contributing to this tension are politically divisive issues that many school superintendents have had to navigate over the last three years, including the teaching of race, book bans and providing access to athletics and bathrooms for students who identify as transgender.

Within this tense environment, a recent study found that nearly 40% of superintendents reported being threatened or feeling threatened on the job. And, 63% of superintendents reported feeling worried about their mental health and well-being over the past two years.

But while superintendents are feeling the heat, policymakers are unable to accurately determine the impact of pressure on superintendent well-being, performance and willingness to stay on the job.

In fact, the U.S. Department of Education does not collect such data on superintendents, and a nationally comprehensive, annually updated superintendent database has never existed.

As an education researcher who studies superintendents, I decided to create the data set myself by collecting data, one district at a time.

New insights into superintendent turnover

Since 2019, my research team has dedicated as many as 400 hours each year to collect the names of superintendents of nearly all traditional public school districts in the United States.

And for a newly published research study in the academic journal Educational Researcher, I conducted a comprehensive, national analysis of superintendent turnover in over 12,500 public school districts since 2019.

My analyses revealed an increase in turnover of nearly 3 percentage points – from 14.2% between 2019-20 and 2020-21 to 17.1% between 2021-22 and 2022-23. More than one out of every three states (37%) had a turnover rate greater than 20% between the last two school years.

A superintendent change occurred at least one time in 35% of districts nationwide, and 6% of districts experienced two or more turnover events.

Though we are unable to determine the exact cause, my research also shows that districts serving larger proportions of students of color were significantly more likely to experience superintendent turnover.

This finding is especially troubling given that frequent churn of leadership can disrupt a school district’s stability and culture, ultimately impacting students’ academic performance.

The role of gender

Superintendent turnover rates vary tremendously across states and districts.

Town and suburban districts were significantly more likely to experience superintendent turnover than urban and rural districts. New research suggests that contentious politics may contribute to superintendent fatigue.

A woman and a man chat as they sit underneath a television screen.
Virginia state superintendent Lisa Coons chats with state Board of Education President Daniel Gecker during a public meeting. Carlos Bernate for The Washington Post via Getty Images


Sixty-five percent of suburban superintendents, for instance, agreed or strongly agreed that school board meetings have become more contentious, compared to 55% of urban superintendents and 47% of rural superintendents.

My research also revealed that superintendent turnover rates for men increased at nearly twice the rate of that for women.

The turnover rate for men jumped 3.2 percentage points, from 13.8% to 17.0%, while the increase for women was 1.8 percentage points, from 15.3% to 17.1%.

Though the jump in turnover rate for men could have narrowed the superintendent gender gap, the gap barely budged. Among districts that experienced turnover, very few hired a new superintendent who was a different gender than their prior superintendent.

As it is currently, the ratio between male and female superintendents nationally is 3-to-1. In some states, that ratio is as large as 8-to-1.

There are also differences in the characteristics of districts where superintendent jobs turned over.

Among districts led by men, those that experienced turnover had significantly larger proportions of students receiving free or reduced price lunches, students of color and students classified as English language learners

Women-led districts that experienced turnover had significantly smaller proportions of students classified as English language learners and students receiving free or reduced-price lunches.

A man dressed in a business suit stands outside of a building.
Shawn C. Petretti, superintendent of schools for the Mattituck-Cutchogue School District in New York, stands outside the district’s administration building. John Paraskevas/Newsday RM via Getty Images


Moreover, districts that experienced superintendent turnover involving either a man or woman with larger proportions of white students were consistently more likely to hire a man to be their next leader.

Why superintendent data matters

This research only begins to fill an expansive void in our basic understanding of American superintendency.

Currently, the most commonly referenced data or reports on superintendents come from the American Association of School Administrators; the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit research institution; and the ILO Group, a women-owned national education strategy and policy firm.

These sources do provide valuable insight into the superintendency.

For example, ILO Group’s analyses show that half of the nation’s largest 500 districts have experienced superintendent turnover since March 2020.

Based on a survey of 222 district leaders, the RAND Corporation found that 13% of superintendents planned to leave their position after the 2020-21 school year.

Yet, this source is quite restricted in what it can reveal about superintendent turnover due to low response rates, small samples and respondent anonymity that does not allow superintendents to be linked to districts.

Additionally, the RAND surveys asked about superintendents’ intentions to leave their current position, a measure known to be largely inaccurate for determining actual turnover.

Due to the limitations of existing data, divergent claims have emerged of both “projected normal turnover rates” and a “mass exodus” of superintendents.

Some states are making an effort to support the collection and analysis of data on superintendents. However, states often make it incredibly challenging for researchers, for example, by charging a substantial fee for data access – in some cases as much as $10,000 a year.

Having this data would provide a timely, comprehensive picture of the superintendency – not just a brief snapshot of a few superintendents at a point in time. Moreover, national, longitudinal superintendent data would allow for deeper examination of the contributors to and consequences of superintendent turnover.

If ensuring some teachers and students are not disproportionately at risk of undesirable superintendent churn, sustained support for and efforts to collect and analyze national longitudinal superintendent data must be prioritized.The Conversation

Rachel S. White, Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, University of Tennessee

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Authorities arrest woman for fatal Tuesday morning stabbing

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 16 May 2023
LAKEPORT, Calif. — The Lake County Sheriff’s Office said it has arrested a woman for murder following a fatal stabbing early Tuesday morning.

Melinda Fred, 39, has been arrested in the case, according to a report from Lt. Luke Bingham.

Bingham identified the murder victim as Christopher Aaron Burrows.

At 4:40 a.m. Tuesday, the sheriff’s office received a 911 call reporting a person had been stabbed on Red Feather Lane in Lakeport, Bingham reported.

Bingham said sheriff’s deputies responded to the area and located Burrows lying on the ground with a stab wound.

Deputies immediately began lifesaving measures until the arrival of paramedics. However, Bingham said Burrows ultimately succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced deceased at the scene.

Bingham said deputies secured the scene and requested the assistance of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Major Crimes Unit, which responded and assumed the investigation.

After conducting a lengthy investigation, several interviews and review of surrounding video surveillance, Bingham said investigators questioned Fred and arrested her for murder, Bingham said.

Bingham said Fred was booked into the Lake County Correctional Facility for first-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon that was not a firearm.

The Major Crimes Unit is asking anyone with additional information regarding this investigation to contact Det. Dean Preader at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 707-262-4231.
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